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Mystic Treatises by Isaac of Nineveh
Syriac Studies Library
154
Series Editors
The Syriac Studies Library brings back to active circulation major reference works in the field of Syriac studies, including dictionaries, grammars, text editions, manuscript catalogues, and monographs. Tne°BÎ5;(3k"WîÇelaféproduced from originals at The Catholic University of America, one of the largest collections of Eastern Christianity in North America. The project is a collaboration between CUA, Beth Mardutho: The Syriac Institute, and Brigham Young University.
Mystic Treatises by Isaac of Nineveh
Translated from Bedjan's Syriac Text with an Introduction and Registers
Translated and Annotated by
1 2011
gorgias press
Gorgias Press LLC, 954 River Road, Piscataway, NJ, 08854, USA www.gorgiaspress.com Copyright© 2011 by Gorgias Press LLC Originally published in 1923 All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, scanning or otherwise without the prior written permission of Gorgias Press LLC.
2011
1 ISBN 978-1-61719-502-0
Reprinted from the 1923 Amsterdam edition.
Digitized by Brigham Young University. Printed in the United States of America.
Series Foreword
This series provides reference works in Syriac studies from original books digitized at the ICOR library of The Catholic University of America under the supervision of Monica Blanchard, ICOR's librarian. The project was carried out by Beth Mardutho: The Syriac Institute and Brigham Young University. About 675 books were digitized, most of which will appear in this series. Our aim is to present the volumes as they have been digitized, preserving images of the covers, front matter, and back matter (if any). Marks by patrons, which may shed some light on the history of the library and its users, have been retained. In some cases, even inserts have been digitized and appear here in the location where they were found. The books digitized by Brigham Young University are in color, even when the original text is not. These have been produced here in grayscale for economic reasons. The grayscale images retain original colors in the form of gray shades. The books digitized by Beth Mardutho and black on white. We are grateful to the head librarian at CUA, Adele R. Chwalek, who was kind enough to permit this project. "We are custodians, not owners of this collection," she generously said at a small gathering that celebrated the completion of the project. We are also grateful to Sidney Griffith who supported the project.
PREFACE It is with a feeling of hesitation that I publish this work. I must confess that the author's intention has not always become clear to me. I hope that some of the readers may be in better condition. The reason why I have yet decided to trust this book to the press, is that Isaac may be called one of the most genuine and profound representatives of Oriental mysticism. There is another ground that induced me to undertake the present translation. Isaac stands chronologically and materially on the threshold of Muslim mysticism. H e has developed some essential features which have become prominent among the Muslims. I only mention his view on the ,means';—the — and on the value of seaking disdain, So I hope that this publication will prove to be of some use for the history and understanding of one of the most important departments of Islam. It would have been impossible for me to prepare an English translation of Isaac's work without the assistance of an English scholar trained in Oriental mysticism. Professor D. B. Macdonald of Hartford was so kind as to draw my attention to one of his former pupils, the Reverend W I L L I A M T H O M S O N , B. D., who undertook to correct the English style with painstaking care. Moreover he collated some of the Mss. in the British Museum and provided me with valuable suggestions. I am anxious to express to him publicly my sincere thanks. The present translation is as literal as seemed compatible with an English style. It may be considered as a compromis between my point of view and Mr. Thomson's. If there have remained expressions which are rather Syriac than English, they are due to my stubbornness. T h e rendering of some of the technical expressions gave a good deal of trouble. « t« e. g. is usually translated by deliberations' or ,thoughts'. Mr. Thomson often suggested ,intuitions' which in some cases would perhaps suit the context, but in other
VI
PREFACE
instances expresses more than the word contains. the
reader
gradually
will
grasp
the
meaning
I hope that of
this
and
similar terms. I gratefully a c k n o w l e d g e the liberality of our R o y a l A c a d e m y in g i v i n g the present work a place in the series of its publications. T h e ,Leidsch Universiteitsfonds' kindly complied with my request to grant the sum necessary for the final preparing of the manuscript. I b e g the syndics to agree my warmest thanks. Leiden,
1922.
CONTENTS Page
PREFACE CONTENTS . . REFERENCES INTRODUCTION ' T h e t e x t and the Greek translation Isaac's age and person A sketch of Isaac's mystical ideas Isaac's place in Oriental thought TRANSLATION CHAPTER I \ II • • • • . . . .
14 28 42
VI I „ V I I . On other subjects, chapter b y chapter, in short sections: on the character of trust in God, etc C H A P T E R V I I I . W h a t is it that helps a man to come near unto God with his heart etc C H A P T E R I X . On sins [committed] intentionally and with evil will and on those [committed) accidentally C H A P T E R X . On the words of the scriptures being spoken as it were to patients etc C H A P T E R X I . W h e r e b y the beauty of solitary life is to be preserved and how it can be a cause of God's being glorified C H A P T E R X I I . T h a t it is not beautiful for the servant of God who has renunciated the world and has gone forth to seek even the truth, out of fear that he shall not find the truth, to desist from seeking it etc C H A P T E R X I I I . On the v a r y i n g states which come to those who live in solitude etc C H A P T E R X I V . A s to when those who live in solitude, begin to know, even to a slight extent, how far they have advanced in their service etc C H A P T E R X V . On the course of the solitary career, succinctly and without prolixity. A n d on the question how and at what time its virtues are born one from the other C H A P T E R X V I . H o w profitable it is for the soul while in solitude to be free from works etc
55
„
I
r-rj > On the behaviour of excellence. V V
v vii xi XII XII xvil xxm xlv i i 7
67 70 74 78 80
82 84
85
87 89
VIII
CONTENTS Page
C H A P T E R X V I I . On the short paths towards God which are revealed to one from the sweet works in vigils etc. . C H A P T E R X V I I I . Things which I have heard from old men and stories of holy people etc C H A P T E R X I X . On the revelations and powers which happen to the saints in images C H A P T E R X X . On various intelligible forces of the mind, in connection with the action of revelations and spiritual visions. C H A P T E R X X I . On that which happens during prayer [unto those who live] in solitude C H A P T E R X X I I . On various [experiences] in prayer and on the limits of the power of the mind etc C H A P T E R X X I I I . On the speech of true knowledge . . . . C H A P T E R X X I V . On the things a brother is provided with in his cell C H A P T E R X X V . T h e opportunities of the soul that seeks profound contemplation, to immerse itself in it [and so escape] from bodily deliberations which arise from things recollected. C H A P T E R X X V I . Against those who s a y : If God is good, wherefore has He made these things? C H A P T E R X X V I I . In how many different ways the sight of incorporeal things is received by human nature C H A P T E R X X V I I I . A symbolical demonstration concerning the theory of Sabbath and Sunday , C H A P T E R X X I X . On the different excellent methods of wise providence in educating pupils C H A P T E R X X X . On the power and the evil action of sin; and concerning those in whom it maintains itself and those in whom it is annihilated C H A P T E R X X X I . On the struggle or rather the danger of falling that excellent works incur C H A P T E R X X X I I . On the aim of guarding the heart. A n d on subtle speculation that looks into the Apartment . . . . C H A P T E R X X X I I I . On the action of divine love C H A P T E R X X X I V . On the natural children of virtues and the like C H A P T E R X X X V . A treatise in questions and answers concerning constant behaviour and every kind of excellence etc. C H A P T E R X X X V I . On the various ways in which Satan wars against those who tread the narrow way which is above the world C H A P T E R X X X V I I . On the things the exact use of which I have learnt by the knowledge of discernment C H A P T E R X X X V I I I . Short sentences concerning the distinction of the mind's impulses C H A P T E R X X X I X . Helpful advice based 011 love C H A P T E R X L . Exposition concerning the degrees of the path, namely concerning the power of ministration of each of them.
91 95 105 109 110 1xI 118 120
124 128 132 136 138
141 145 146 148 149 152
180 188 194 197 202
CONTENTS
IX Page
C H A P T E R X L I . A letter which he wrote to one of the brethren who loved solitude etc 203 C H A P T E R X L I I . T h e answer he sent his natural and spiritual brother etc 209 C H A P T E R X L I I I . Profitable words full of spiritual w i s d o m . . 210 C H A P T E R X L I V . Concerning how many degrees k n o w l e d g e has and concerning the degrees of faith 212 C H A P T E R X L V . Profitable advice 215 C H A P T E R X L V I . Other considerations 221 C H A P T E R X L V I I . On the angelic motions stirring in us b y divine Providence for the education of the soul in spiritual things 225 C H A P T E R X L V I I I . On the v a r y i n g states of light and darkness to which the soul is subject at all times etc 227 C H A P T E R X L I X . On the g l o o m y darkness which during solitude befalls those who walk in the discipline of knowledge. . . 228 C H A P T E R L . Short sections containing various considerations in which is shown the injury caused b y foolish zeal etc. . 230 C H A P T E R L I . On the three degrees of knowledge etc. . . . 242 C H A P T E R L I I . Short sections on a different subject, on the distinction of the impulses of knowledge 253 C H A P T E R L I I I . On prayer and the other things which are necessarily to be sought in constant recollection etc. . . 254 C H A P T E R L I V . Other explanations concerning maggenanutha . 261 C H A P T E R L V . H o w the hidden alertness within the soul is to be preserved etc 263 C H A P T E R L V I . Beautiful considerations concerning the life of man 265 C H A P T E R L V I I . H o w patience for the sake of the love of God acquires help from God 268 C H A P T E R L V I I I . On those w h o live in the neighbourhood of God and pass all their d a y s in a life of k n o w l e d g e . . . 273 C H A P T E R L I X . A profitable discourse 278 C H A P T E R L X . T h a t without necessity we should not desire nor ask that any sign should manifestly happen through us or unto us . . 282 C H A P T E R L X I . F o r which causes God admits temptations to His friends 286 C H A P T E R L X I I . T h a t b y the thoughts which stir in a man, he knows to which degree he belongs and which thoughts follow. 288 C H A P T E R L X I I I . W h y it is that people who are in the psychic state of knowledge, consider spiritual things in accordance with [their] bodily grossness etc 293 C H A P T E R L X I V . O n the m a n y v a r y i n g states which cling to the mind and are purified b y prayer 296 C H A P T E R L X V . Good advice g i v i n g instruction concerning watchfulness, and directions concerning the w a y of discipline, b y which a man may acquire a high rank 297
X
CONTENTS Page
C H A P T E R L X V I . A letter which he sent to his friend, in which he expounds some things concerning the mystery of solitude etc. C H A P T E R L X V I I . A n elucidation with examples concerning the distinctions between intelligible things [showing] which use there is in each of them C H A P T E R L X V I I I . Short sections C H A P T E R L X I X . How the intelligent have to dwell in solitude. C H A P T E R L X X . That we can understand the degree of our behaviour by the varying states of our mind, etc. . . . C H A P T E R L X X I . On the influence proceeding from Grace. . C H x ^ P T E R L X X I I . On true knowledge and on temptations, etc. C H A P T E R L X X I I I . The concise sense of the [foregoing] section, together with explanations of what has been said . . . . C H A P T E R L X X I V . On the discrimination of virtues and the scope of the whole course, and the greatness of the love unto mankind, etc C H A P T E R L X X V . On hidden states and the powers and influences which are in them C H A P T E R L X X V I . Short sayings C H A P T E R L X X V I I . This chapter is full of life C H A P T E R L X X V I I I . On the profit [arising] from the flight from the world, the method of which has been thought out by the Fathers through prudent examination C H A P T E R L X X I X . How the hidden impulses vary along with the variation of outward behaviour i . . . C H A P T E R L X X X . On vigils and on the many different kinds of labours during them. A n d that it is not becoming that the aim of our labours should be the fulfilling of a quantity, but [to work] in freedom and with discrimination etc. . . C H A P T E R L X X X I . A n answer to a brother who had asked him why, when our Lord has defined mercy as similitude to the greatness of the Father in heaven, the solitaries honour solitude more than it? etc C H A P T E R L X X X I I . How much honour humility possesses and how high its rank is GENERAL REGISTER QUOTATIONS FROM THE BIBLE
312
316 318 321 324 328 332 337
341 348 350 352
360 361
366
379 384 391 399
REFERENCES Antonius and Maximus. S e e
Stobaeus.
Dionysius A r e o p a g i t a , O p e r a Omnia (ed. Lansselius, Paris 1615). Epicteti Dissertationes London 1741).
ab
Arriano
collectae
(ed.
A . L . Frothingham, Stephen bar Sudaili, the Syrian and the B o o k of Hierotheos (Leyden Ghazäli, Ihyä'
1302).
Philo, O p e r a (ed. M a n g e y , London
1742).
cum
Marsilii Kicini interpretatione castigata iterum
ediderunt F . Creuzer et G . H. Moser (Paris, Stobaeus, Sententiae . . . . collectarum Allobr.
per
1609).
Mystic
1886).
al-Din (Kairo
Plotinus
c Ulüm
Upton,
Antonium
1855).
item loci communes sententiarium et
Maximum
monachos
(Aurel.
INTRODUCTION THE
TEXT
AND
THE
GREEK
TRANSLATION
T h e present English text has been translated from the edition of the original Syriac by P. Bedjan 3 ), p. i — 5 8 1 . T h e rest of Bedjan's publication contains some extracts from other works of Isaac, which Bedjan did not edit, because he did not possess manuscripts which seemed to him sufficient for this purpose. T h e works from which these extracts were taken, are considered as genuine by Bedjan. I have not been able to consult them, as they are preserved in several places in Western Asia. I do not consider the fact, that these writings are still unknown to us, as an important lacuna in our knowledge concerning the ideas of Isaac. F o r the present text contains — sometimes repeated — expositions of his thoughts on themes which in their totality give a survey of the whole system. T h a t these treatises are genuine is the opinion of Chabot and Bedjan ; I think that we have no ground to doubt it. T h e style, the vocabulary and the ideas are uniform throughout the whole work. A n d the few indications as to the personality of the author concord with particulars which are known to us from other sources 3). Bedjan's text has been determined from several manuscripts, which he enumerates in his avant-propos, and may be called a good one, especially as the style and the subjects treated cannot have been easily intelligible to ordinary scribes. F o r some passages, indeed, the help of an accurate translation
1 ) All further references are to the pages of Bedjan's edition. 2) Mar Isaaats Ninivita de perfections 3) Cf. beneath, p. X V I I sq.
religiosa
(Paris 1909 (p. 582—639).
INTRODUCTION
XIII
would have been of value to me. But, as far as I see, none of the accessible ones deserves this description. I need not enumerate them here, I may refer the reader to Chabot's dissertation on Isaac a ). T o the Mss. containing an Arabic translation of the genuine and spurious works of Isaac, must now be added a codex which F . Krenkow presented to the John Rylands Library at Manchester. On his request Dr. A . Mingana was so kind as to copy for me some passages, which show a close affinity with the extracts from the Mss. at Rome, given by Assemani. According to Chabot this translation was made from the Greek. A t any rate it seems not to afford valuable help for a literal understanding of the Syriac t e x t ; consequently I have not deemed it worth while to burden the present publication with new costs, which a photographic reproduction of these Arabic Mss. for my use would have imposed. One Arabic translation I could use at liberty, viz. that contained in Cod. 5 belonging to the R o y a l Academy at Amsterdam, to which my attention was drawn by Dr. van Arendonk. T h e Ms. contains nearly one half of Bedjan's t e x t ; long passages fo the translated treatises have been left out; sometimes a few sentences are added. On the whole, the translation is not bad, but not literal enough to afford a valuable basis for corrections of the Syriac text. T h e Greek translation, concerning which Chabot has given the necessary communications, was at my disposition in the Leiden library through the kindness of the direction of the University Library at Leipzig, a liberality which is highly to be prized, as copies of the book are very rare, as has been pointed out by Chabot, whose severe judgment concerning the way in which the translation was made, must be acknowledged to be just. I willingly acknowledge that in some cases the Greek text has been of value to me. Y e t I have not deemed it necessary to collate it throughout with the Syriac original; this was a labour which it did not deserve. In one respect the Greek translation — or at any rate the printed text — differs totally from its original, viz. in the sequence of the chapters. In order to facilitate its collation with Bedjan's text I give a table of the corresponding chapters i) Dc haaci Ninivitae
vita^ scriptis et doctrina (Louvain, 1892).
XIV
INTRODUCTION
in a footnote, as far as I could identify them l). Thus of the 82 treatises of the Syriac text 14 are missing in the Greek translation, or more than one sixth. Among these chapters there are some of the most difficult; so that it is not unjust to suppose that the translators gave them up for this reason. This hypothesis is confirmed by the fact that also large parts of the translated chapters are left out, and usually those which contain difficult passages. On the other hand the translators have added four treatises which are not in the Syriac text, and which appear to belong to the writings of the so-called John Saba, viz. n°. 2, 7, 43 and 80 which are respectively found in the Syriac Mss. Add. 14. 758 (British Museum), fol. 249 s13 ), and in the Ms. described by Assemani, Bibliothcca Orientalis, I, p. 440, sermo 20; in 1)
Syr. 1
2
Gr. I
30 82
p. 20—22 . . . !
p. 22—30 . . . P- 3 o — 3 7 •
•
83 •
44
45 45 p. 37—end. . . 23 5 6 56 7 22 8 21 9 4i 10 70 11 10 12 11 13 14 14
30 31 32 33
1 P- 139—142 p. 142—144 18 p. 144—146 p. 146—144
. . • .
I p. 148—end .
• . • . .
9 13 29 75 76 77 -78 79
19 — 20 — 21 — I p. 163—165 . . 31 22 1! p. 165—end . . 32 23 — 24 — 25
2) W r i g h t ,
67
— 84
Gr.
35
36
53
p. 2 0 8 - -211 p. 211- -end
42 55
p. 2 1 8 — 2 1 9 p. 2 1 9 — e n d
24 16
p. p. p. p. p. p.
224—267 267—269 269—271 271—275 275—276 276—end
85 47
51 52
53 54 26
37 291—292 292—end
27 46
39 40
17
41 42
Epist. 1 Epist. 2 72 IS
43 44 45 46 47
73 P- 335" -337 P- 337- -338
39 40 57
49 5°
51 52
Catalogue of the Syriac
Syr.
74
34
15
1 56 17
26 27
Syr. 28 29
58
P- 3 4 3 — 3 5 3 P- 3 5 3 — 3 5 9
Mssn
III, p
583
60 62 66
Gr. ) P- 379—385 • 1 p. 3 8 5 - e n d .
• .
54 55
33 3 — 61
56
-
57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64
25 37 4 36 48 38 35 59 | P. 4 4 3 — 4 4 6 . . — 6 I p. 446—end . . 34 66 Epist. 3 67 69 partly and in a free manner in! corporated in Gr. 69 69 12 70 8
71
—
72 73 74 75
49 50 81 —
77 78
19
79
71
76
80 | P ' 5 4 6 ~ 5 4 9 ' I p. 549 sqq. . 81 82
-
6 " .
28
— — 20
INTRODUCTION
XV
Assemani, I, p. 4 3 7 , sermo 8 ; in Assemani, I, p. 4 3 6 , sermo 1 ; Add. 14. 728 fol. 2 5 o b l ) and Assemani, I, p. 440, sermo 22. Further the table shows that the Greek translators have dealt freely with the division of the Syriac text in chapters. On a much smaller scale the Syriac Mss. have also used some liberty in this respect. T h e Greeks had the more reason to act thus, because they adopted a system of sequence totally different from the Syriac one. W h o e v e r compares the sequence of the chapters in the Greek text, will observe that here the arrangement has been made according to the subjects treated in the different chapters ; here is united what is alike in nature: the chapters on love are put together, equally those on temptations, and so on. This arrangement, at first sight, would seem entitled to a claim of originality, especially when it is contrasted with the Syriac text, which does not betray a systematic arrangement. Still, the Syriac Mss. extant show the same order with slight variations. This points to a fixed tradition in this respect. A close examination of the Syriac text provides us with material which is sufficient to settle this question. T h e first six treatises (which are scattered over the Greek translation) have this subscription in the Syriac text: Finished are the six treatises on the behaviour of excellence. In accordance herewith is the fact that none of these chapters has a title of its own as the other ones have, but that they are simply indicated b y : Treatise the first, and so on. T h e title of the seventh chapter, which apparently — as well as all the other titles — was given by Isaac himself, runs thus: Further, on other subjects, chapter by chapter, etc Here is a proof of the authenticity of the arrangement of the Syriac text. T h e r e are further indications which point in the same direction. On p. 94 the author speaks of the later chapters in which he promises to deal with the significance of tears. This is in accordance with the facts, as a consultation of the register s. v. T e a r s can teach. — A t the beginning of chapter 33 the author refers to chapter 32 ; the Greek translation has torn these chapters asunder. Likewise the beginning of chapter 36
1 ) Wright,
/., I l l , p. 5 8 3 .
2) T h e A r a b s a p p a r e n t l y h a v e taken one the m e t a p h o r i c a l senses of UJIJ f r o m the S y r i a n s .
XVI
INTRODUCTION
points back to the end of chapter 35 ; here the connection is equally disregarded by the Greek translators. — In the beginning of the chapter on inspiration (n°. 54) the author reminds the reader of his treating this subject previously; this has taken place on pages 1 0 7 and 160. •— Chapter 73 entitles itself as a succinct rendering of n°. 7 2 ; here the right sequence is preserved even in the Greek translation. — On p. 5 7 3 the author, explaining his definite ideas on solitude and intercourse, warns the reader not to argue against him on account of quotations from foregoing pages, taken at random from the context. A s a matter of fast Isaac has dealt with this subject largely in his book, as again may be seen from the Register. — This evidence is conclusive in my opinion. Still, the fact remains, that the Syriac text, taken as a whole, has nothing to do with a real composition. In this respect it is in sharp contrast with other mystical works written by congenial spirits. Bar Hebraeus shows a great predilection for systematic order, a tendency which he already found in his example al-Ghazali. T h e Book of Hierotheos is also systematically arranged. Isaac's example, however, is imitated by John Saba, whose works, according to the descriptions of the Mss.,. also seem to consist of single treatises which are not linked together by any progessive idea. T h e present text, therefore, is only to be taken as a long — a very long — exposition of the many sides and theories and experiences of mystical life. Of course this lack of compositional lines has given rise to many repetitions, which are sometimes fatiguing, but often welcome to us as containing explanations. Perhaps Isaac's way of proceeding should be ascribed to some extent to the fact that at a certain age — and he wrote the present book when very old •— his eyesight was lost, so that he could no longer read but was obliged to have recourse to scribes. Perhaps this fact accounts also for his style, which is full of too lengthy periods and anacolouthons. It is in accordance with the defective composition of the book, that it has no distinct title. Bedjan has called it De perfectione religiosa, which seems to be a free rendering of the subscription of the first six treatises ,on the behaviour of excellence'. Some, but not all Mss. 1 ), give the title ,On the way 1) Bedjan's text, p. I, note I.
XVÎI
INTRODUCTION
of monasticism'. Both are equally in harmony with the contents of the book, but many similar ones would have been also possible. T h e author seems not to have been minded to look for such a one as at once prints itself into the memory, as e g. Bar Hebraeus and Ghazall did. One peculiar feature of the Greek translation has still to be discussed, viz. the way in which it deals with Isaac's authorities. T h e names of the Fathers of Scete appear without exception ; likewise, the great theologians of the fourth century are left in their place, as e. g. Athanasius, Basil, Ephraim; and in the only passage where Dionysios (the Areopagite) occurs, his name is not suppressed. Euagrius on the other hand, who is very often cited in the original, never occurs in the Greek text. He is either left out, or replaced by such names as Nilos, the blessed Marcus, the divine and great Gregory. Likewise the Commentator, Theodore of Mopsuestia, who is also often cited in the original text, is either left out by the Greeks, or replaced by Gregory, John Chrysostom, Martinianus. In stead of Diodorus Rhetor or Diodorus of Tarsos Dionysius the Areopagite or ,one of the great sages' appear. And in another passage ,the blessed Cyril' is introduced by the translators on their own authority. This means that they thought it better to suppress those names which were not accepted by the Monophysite church; the mention of Cyril is in accordance with this. In this connection I may refer to Bedjan's preface, p. VIII, who has shown that some passages on the nature of Christ have been altered by non-Nestorian scribes and translators. II ISAAC'S
AGE
AND
PERSON
It is only of late that Isaac's age has been fixed with approximate certainty. In Syriac Mss.. he is sometimes confounded with Isaac of Antioch, and when it became clear that our author belonged to a different period, it was not at first easy to give precise dates. Two Syriac texts which were edited by Chabot and Rahmani each contain a short bioi ) Cf. on him the article in Herzog's Protest.
Real-Encyclopädie. B
Xvîll
INTRODUCTION
graphy of Isaac. It may be worth while to give a translation of both of them. On the holy Mar Isaac, bishop of Ninive, who resigned his episcopal office and wrote books on the behaviour of solitaries. He was ordained a bishop of Ninive by Mar George the Katholikos, in the monastery of Bet c Abe l ). After he had held the pastoral staff at Ninive for five months, as the successor of bishop Moses, he resigned his episcopal office, for a reason which God knows, and went away to live in the mountains. And after the chair had been vacant for this time, the blessed Sabr Ishoc was ordained as his successor, who also left his episcopal office and became an anchorite in the days of Hanan Ishoc the Katholikos, and departed this world in the monastery of Mar Shehin in Kurdistan. When Isaac left the chair of Ninive, he ascended the mountain of Matut which surrounds Bet Huzaje and lived in solitude among the anchorites who were there. Afterwards he went to the monastery of Rabban Shabur and became exceedingly well acquainted with the divine writings; at last he lost his eyesight through his reading and asceticism. He penetrated deeply into the divine mysteries and wrote books on the divine behaviour of solitaries. He said three things which were not accepted by the community. Daniel, the bishop of Bet Garmaia, was scandalized at him on account of these things which he said. In high age he departed this temporary life; his corpse was interred in the monastery of Shabur. He was born in Bet Katraye; I think that envy was aroused against him by people of the country even as it was against Joseph Hazzaya and John of Apamea and John de Daliyateh. — This biography is taken from the Ketaba de. Nakfuta 2). The following biography occurs in Rahmani's Studia Syriaca 3). This Mar Isaac of Ninive was born in Bet Katraye beneath India. When he had become excercised in the writings of the Church and their commentaries he became a monk and a teacher in his country. And when Mar George the Katholikos went to his own country, he took Isaac with him to Bet Aramaye, because he was a relative of Mar Gabriel Katraya, the 1 ) Cf. Hoffmann, Auszùge, p. 226 2) éd. Chabot in Mélanges d'archéologie çaise de Rome),
p. 63.
2) I, p.
et d'histoire^ .
X V I e année 1896 (Ecole
fran-
INTRODUCTION
XIX
commentator of the church. Mar Isaac was ordained a bishop of Ninive
in the
monastery of Bet
cAbe.
But because of his
keen mind and his zeal, he could endure the pastoral function for
five
months only. T h e n he returned to his solitude, after
he had asked the permission of P a p a , who dismissed him and ordered Bet
him
to
go
and
live
in solitude in the Mountain of
H u z a y e with the monks who dwelt there. A t last he be-
came
blind,
They
g a v e him the surname of the second Didymus,
so
that
the
brethren
wrote
down
his
doctrine. because
he was placid and kind and humble, and his speech was meek. He
ate
only
three
loafs of
bread a w e e k , with small vege-
tables ; he never tasted what was cooked. H e wrote five volumes
which
are
is attested his
pupil
extant
by
Mar
till
now
Jozadak
[full of] sweet doctrine. This
in the letter which he wrote to
Bushlr, to the monastery of Mar Shabur, s a y i n g : I
thank the L o r d because of your diligence which has sent me the
doctrine
acquired have
of
Mar
in your
filled
our
Isaac
life
of Ninive. I know that you have
the k e y s of the kingdom, because you
monastery
with
doctrine full of life. F o r we
confess that we are pupils of Mar Isaac the bishop of Ninive. — So
he
writes
John
the
great
support
in his letter. A n d in the end he says, even as
Bishop:
the
and
writings
of
strengthening
Mar
Isaac
have
power to me. —
been
of
When
he
had grown old and had reached a high a g e , he departed unto our L o r d . A n d he was buried in the monastery of Mar Shabur.
—
On account of these notices, we may state that Isaac became bishop in the second half of the seventh century. Isaac's
work
on
mystical
life
shows
us
a man who must
have felt himself unhappy on the episcopal chair, we are only amazed
at the fact that he let himself be ordained and kept
his office for five months. A s s e m a n i has printed from the A r a b i c translation clue
to
of
Isaac's
Isaac's
works
abdication.
a story pretending to g i v e the It
has, however, the value of an
anecdote only. Isaac's
episcopate
and
his
abdication
are
confirmed
by a
p a s s a g e in the present text (Bedjan, p. 248 sq.). It occurs in the
long
between
treatise a
master
n°.
35
and
which his
pupil
has the who
form of a dialogue
asks
questions. Isaac
very seldom speaks plainly about himself; he usually imitates
1) Bibliotheca Orientalis, I, 444
INTRODUCTION
the way in which St. Paul once speaks about his own experiences : I know a man who etc. On p. 248 h e : tells something about one of the saints. Then he continues: [Another witness to this is] he who etc. Then he tells how this latter felt divine care as long as he was in the desert, but lost it when he was in the inhabited world. Then he asked God, s a y i n g : Perhaps, my Lord, Grace has been withdrawn from me on account of my episcopal rank? It was said to him: No. A similar allusion seems to occur on p p. 5 5 3 : Some of them [viz. the solitaries] were sustained by a bird. Behold, these last sixty years I have received the half of my bread from a such a bird. Others are sustained by some tree or a palm in a supernatural way, as one of them has said, viz. the bishop who repented in the desert. I am now in this desert nine and forty years. God has granted me life through this palm. — Further we learn from the present text, that he had a brother, who had likewise devoted himself to solitary life, for he calls him his natural and spiritual brother in the letter which occurs in the present text as n°. 42 of the treatises. T h e contents of this letter show us Isaac in full. His brother was ill, apparently very ill, and had asked him to come and visit him. But Isaac had his stern ideas on the point of intercourse, which are found throughout his work. S o he refused to go. Now it seems that he also makes an allusion to this refusal in a later passage, an allusion which is clad in the same dress as those we have cited above. On p. 3 1 2 he s a y s : W e know another of the saints whose natural brother was ill. H e lived as a recluse in a different cell. During the whole period of his brother's sickness he restrained his mercy, so that he did not go out the visit him. When the sick man was on the point of departing from this world, he sent his brother a message to this effect: Come, that I may see thee before I depart the world, even if it be in the night. Then I will take leave from thee and g o to rest. T h e blessed one, however, was not to be persuaded even at this time, when natural mercy usually is stirred, to transgress the voluntary barriers, saying: If I g o out, my heart will not be pure before G o d ; for I despise visiting spiritual brethren ; should I then honour nature above Christ? — So his brother died, without his having seen him. Similarly, on p. 1 7 8 , he s a y s : I know a brother who put
INTRODUCTION
XXI
the key in the door of his cell in order to shut it, for he was going out in order to idle things as Scripture says. A n d there Grace visited him, so that he returned immediately. This sounds also as a personal experience. V e r y clearly the personal character peeps through the impersonal form in a passage, occurring on p. 492 : Now I know one who even during his sleep was overwhelmed by ecstasy in G o d through the contemplation of something which he had read in the evening. A n d while his soul was amazed at this contemplative meditation, he perceived as it were that he had meditated for long in the motion of sleep, and examined the ecstatic vision. It was in the depth of the night, and suddenly he awoke from his sleep while his tears dropped as water and fell upon his breast*); and his mouth was full of glorification etc. This passage brings us to Isaac as a mystic. Several times he speaks of his experiences. P a g e 4 3 0 : My beloved ones, because I was foolish, I could not bear to guard the secret in silence, but am become mad for the sake of my brethren's profit. F o r true love is not able to cling to the cause of love, apart from friends. Often when I was writing these things, my fingers paused on the paper. T h e y could not bear the delight that had fallen into the heart and which made the senses silent. In the wonderful chapter on the varying states of light and darkness (n°. 48) he speaks about the despair which sometimes overwhelms the solitary. If he did not say that he is speaking on account of experience yet every reader would feel it from his very words. But he speaks plainly: If thou possessest no power to dominate thy soul and to fall upon thy face in prayer, envelop thy head in thy mantle and lie down till the hour of darkness has passed away from thee. L e a v e not, however, thy cell. B y this temptation are tried especially those who are willing to walk in mental discipline and who in their course are running toward the consolation which comes from faith. All these things we have experienced many times and recorded to the consolation of many. In the beginning of chapter 24 he does not expressly say that he speaks from his own experience, but the passage is personal enough in its tenour: It occurs many times in a day, that a brother, even if thou shouldst give him the kingdom 1 ) It is to be remembered that Isaak used to sleep sitting.
XXII
INTRODUCTION
of the world, would not consent at that hour to leave his cell or to [allow] any one to visit him. F o r the time of commerce has presented itself, of a sudden. Such things happen on days such as are considered as days of relaxation. Often on such days and even on those wherein he has intercourse with others, grace of a sudden will visit him, in tears without measure, or a vivid affection moving the heart, or a certain gladness without cause, or the delight of kneelings. T h e r e are many passages in the book, which breathe an equally personal spirit. T h e reader will find them himself. H e r e attention is to be drawn to a different kind of utterances, which disclose their personal character. A t the end of the chapter on tears (n° 14) he s a y s : This I have written to the profit of myself and of everyone who comes across this book, being that which I h a v e attained by contemplation of the scriptures and from the mouth of veracious men (and to a small part by experience). Still more strongly he utters himself in another passage (p. 1 6 4 ) : In His bounty H e has opened our blind heart to understand, by the contemplation of the scriptures and the instruction of the great Fathers, even although I have not been deemed worthy of experiencing for personal zeal one thousandth of what I have written with my hands, especially in this tract which we have ventured to write for the illumination and exhortation of our soul and of those who come across it. — Such utterances do not stand by themselves in mystical literature. On the one hand it is well known that the mystics in general are dependant on congenial spirits, in their writings as well as in their experiences. On the other hand nearly all of them confess, that their own time is void of the highest mystic experience and that they themselves are longing to reach what their predecessors seem to have reached. Bar Hebraeus, after having written three books on mysticism, confesses that his sun is still in the sign of Capricorn and that he prays for more light 1 ). This feature Isaac has in common with most of the mystics, as also his aversion to dogmatic disputes. P a g e 48 he warns against reading books which accentuate the differences between the confessions, with the aim of causing schisms, which provides the spirit of slander with a mighty weapon against the soul. 1) Boole of the Dove, Sentence 79
XXIII
INTRODUCTION
This is, generally speaking, the attitude of the mystics in Western Asia. It is as if they felt that they belonged to one common t y p e ; moreover, dogmatics, which are the great causes of dessension, do not interest them-, they think of how they may ascend unto the One and A l l ; what are dogmatic subtleties to this flight of the mind? Bar Hebraeus has very plainly spoken his ideas on this point and A b d al-Kadir al-Djllanl even estimated the differences between Islam, Christianity and Judaism as being of no real importance 1 ). Isaac combines his aversion to confessional differences with a beautiful love of mankind. ,Deem all men worthy of bounty on thy part. Especially because thou incitest them unto truth thereby. T h e soul can easily be drawn by corporeal things to the thought of the fear of God. Also our Lord shared his table with publicans and harlots, without making any distinction between those who were worthy and those who were not Therefore, deem all people worthy of bounty and honour, be they Jews or miscreants or murderers' 3 ). With such utterances may be compared the beautiful passages concerning the mystic love of mankind and the whole creation (p. 507, 508, 5 1 0 , 570). This much may be sufficient concerning Isaac's person and character; the real man is in his book.
Ill A SKETCH
OF I S A A C ' S
MYSTICAL
IDEAS
It will always be difficult to describe mystical ideas in a systematic f o r m ; a mystical system can hardly be spoken of in Isaac's c a s e ; and we have already said, that his book is as unsystematic as any book can be. Still, the chief ideas of its author are expounded in it some repeatedly and sometimes very explicitly. This enables us to give a short characteristic of its contents. There is a special reason why such a characteristic can be short. In the Introduction to the translation of Bar Hebraeus's Book of the D o v e the attempt has been made to give a survey 1) On this tolerance of Muslim mystics see Sir T. W. Arnold's instructive article ,Toleration' in Hasting's Dictionary of Religion and Ethics. 2) p. 55
INTRODUCTION
XXIV
of the mystical type to which Bar Hebraeus belongs; from that it would appear that he is of a type with Isaac. So I may refer the reader in the first place to the Introduction mentioned. But there remain ideas enough which are Isaac's peculiar property and which have to be discussed here for Isaac's readers in particular. His relation to his predecessors and to Muslim mysticism will be treated in the following section. Isaac devides the mystic way into three sections: repentance, purity or purification, and perfection a). This sequence is of a logical nature in the first place; it will appear that it cannot be taken as a temporal distinction in the strict sense; he that has reached the state of perfection will often want purification again, and even repentance. In this respect he is less systematic than Bar Hebraeus, who makes these states to coincide with the abode in the monastery, with that in the cell, and with the state of spiritual consolation. W e may keep Isaac's division in describing his ideas. But beforehand it is necessary to say a few words concerning the general position of his mysticism. Just as other mystics z) he shrinks from divulging his most intimate experiences. ,As to the question of the cause of that other prayer 3 ) and its duration without compulsion, it seems to me that it is not becoming for us to treat such things in detail, or to describe their nature in speech or writing, lest the reader, being unable to understand anything of it, should judge it to be something insipid; or, if he should be acquainted with these things, should despise him who is not able to cross the border of certain things' 4). — Isaac's textbook, the use of which is prescribed to all those who walk the ,way', is the Bible. But he interprets it as well as the chief dogma's of Christianity in an allegorical way. Speaking of the thorns and thistles which the earth brings forth since Adam's fall, he says: ,In reality the thorns are affections which grow in us from bodily seed' 5). Mysticism, though dualistic in its deep conscience of good and evil, body and soul, matter and spirit — is monistic in its highest view of God and the world. As a matter of fact the only real Being is God. So Isaac does not acknowledge l ) p. 507 2) The Book of the Dove, 3 ) viz. pure or even spiritual prayer 4) P- 129
5) P- 2 0 4
p. X X V I I sqq.
INTRODUCTION
XXV
Satan at His side as a kind of second God. ,Satan is the name of the deviation of the will from the truth, but it is not the designation of a natural being' l ). Equally the eschatological and cosmological scheme of Oriental positive religion is dissolved by allegorical interpretation. ,Fear is the paternal rod which guides us up to the spiritual Eden, when we are arrived there, it leaves us and returns. Eden is the divine love wherein is the paradise of all good, where the blessed Paul was sustained by supernatural food' 2 ). ,The many mansions in the house of the Father denote the spiritual degrees of the inhabitants of that place. This means: the different gifts and the spiritual ranks in which they rejoice spiritually, and the variety of the classes of gifts' s). And ,the kingdom of heaven is spiritual contemplation' Hell is equally of an intelligible nature 5). Speaking of those who do not enter the kingdom but go into the darkness, Isaac says with a variation on the well known word from the Gospel: ,There will be psychic weeping and grinding of teeth, which is a grief more hard than the fire. Now thou understandest, that to remain far from that elevation, means torturing hell' 6 ). T o the same purport are the words 7 ): ,If the apple of thy soul's eye has not been purified, do not venture to look at the sun, lest thou be bereft of the usual visual power and thou be thrown into one of those intelligible places which are Tartarus and a type of hell, namely darkness without God, whither those who with the impulses of their mind leave nature, wander by the cognitive nature which they possess. Therefore he that ventured to go to the banquet in sordid garments, was ordered to be thrown out into that outer darkness. By the banquet is designated the sight of spiritual knowledge. T h e institutions in it are the manifold divine mysteries, full of joy and exultation and delight of the soul. The garment of the banquet he calls the mantle of purity; the sordid garments the emotions of the affections which are defiled in the soul; the outer darkness, the state without any delight of true knowledge and communion with God'. It is clear that Isaac simply uses the Bible and Christian dogmas as a means to support his own ideas by an outward I) p. 189 2) p. 315 sq. 4) P- 528 5) P- 456 21 S( 7) P- 5 l") cf. p. 16 sq., 50
3) p. 86 6) p. 88
XXVI
INTRODUCTION
authority. But it is again to be borne in mind that it was not only Isaac among the mystics, nor only the mystics among the intepreters of the Bible in early Christian times who followed such a method. Muslim mystics have submitted the Kor'an to a similar treatment 1 ). W e may even a s k : W a s there any interpreter or school of interpreters of the Bible which did not, in the first place seek after their own ideas in the holy writ? These facts correspond with the mystics' aversion to dogmatical schisms; they were not interested in them, because there was no place for dogmatics in their system. A n d it may be said that mysticism is an exponent of the unity of Hellenistic monotheism. This is the catchword which covers all these mystics of Western A s i a , the early Christian — John Climacus, Basil, Gregory Nazianzen, Euagrius — , the later Christian ones — Stephen bar Sudaile, Dionysiils the Areopagite, Isaac, B a r Hebraeus — , and the Muslims: A b u Talib al-Makki, al-Kushairl, al-Ghazall. A n d in this unity the Eastern Church in its chief representatives is remarkably different from the great Western Fathers. One general point may still be mentioned in connection with the foregoing remarks. Mysticism is said to be essentially pantheistic everywhere. Of Eastern mysticism this is certainly true. Its highest aim, — the unification of God and the mystic — is pantheistic; and, as a matter of fact, they go far in asserting that, in the deepest sense, God is the only Being. Still, the place of this thought and its prominence, is very different in the different authors. In Dionysius' and Stephen bar Sudaile's works the transition of man into God, is described at length and with delight. Bar Hebraeus quotes such passages, but scarcely. In Isaac's works they occur very seldom. In this connection may be cited what Isaac says on p. 1 7 0 : A s the saints, in the world to come, do not pray, when the mind has been engulfed by the [divine] Spirit, but dwell' in ecstasy in that delightful glory, so the mind, when it has been made worthy of perceiving the future blessedness, will forget itself and all that is here etc. In a similar way he speaks on p. 1 9 4 : Now when the intellect withdraws itself from this and is exalted unto the unique Essence, by the contemplation of 1 ) Cf. the highly instructive chapter on mystical interpretation of the Korean in Goldziher's Die Richtungen der islamischen ICoranauslegnng.
INTRODUCTION
XXVII
the properties of that good Nature. When the intellect descends again from that place and returns again to the worlds and their distinctions etc. Generally speaking, Isaac is much more concerned with the state of purification and illumination than with that of perfection and unification. In this respect he belongs rather to the early than to the later type of Oriental mystics. These general remarks may be sufficient as an introduction to a description of Isaac's way in its three stages. Of repentance Isaac gives the usual definition . : . . at every moment of the four and twenty hours of the day, we are in want of repentance. T h e explanation of the denotation of repentance, in its real practical sense, is continual mournful supplication in contrite prayer, offered to God for the forgiveness of preceding sins; and petition to be guarded against future ones. A similar definition occurs in many later mystical works 2 ). Of course this does not imply that Isaac is their direct or indirect source; perhaps Isaac himself is citing a well known predecessor. But the passage contains a proof of what has been said above: the three mystical stages cannot be clearly separated in the mystic; repentance is the foundation of the whole; but as little as the foundation of a building looses its practical value when the whole has been finished, so little does repentance become useless when the second and third stages have been reached. Now repentance does not especially belong to mysticism; it stands at the beginning of the way of every Christian. But Isaac does not separate it from his special thoughts and method. ,Repentance is the constant sorrow of the heart at the meditation of that inexplicable statute: how shall I reach that unspeakable entrance? If thou lovest repentance, then love also solitude. For without this, repentance cannot be completed. If there is any one who disputes this, do not dispute with him, for he does not know what he says. If he did know what repentance is, he also would know its place, and that it is not to be disturbed by trouble. If thou lovest solitude, the father of repentance, then love also to accept' etc. 3 ). And to the same purport is what he says in another chapter 4 ): Repentance is the mother of life. It opens its gate to us, when we I ) p. 502
2~) Cf. Book of the Dove1 p. 6, note 3
3) P- 462
4) P' 443
XXVIII
INTRODUCTION
flee from all things'. — This means that true repentance is only to be practised by the methods which are at the base of mysticism: renunciation, asceticism and solitude. The connection between repentance and spiritual gifts is expounded in the following passage : When thou enquirest well, thou wilt find that the service of the fear of God is repentance. And spiritual knowledge is, as we have said, that of which we have received the pledge in baptism and which we receive really by repentance. T h e gift of which we have said, that we receive it by repentance, is spiritual knowledge, which is given gratuitously for the service of the fear of God. T h e transition from the stage of repentance to that of purity takes place by purification. ,If the small pupil of thy soul has not been purified, do not venture to look at the globe of the sun, lest thou be bereft even of the usual sight' 2) etc. W h a t is that from which man has to be purified ? The question cannot be answered by one term, but needs a longer exposition. Mysticism is spiritualisun, it endeavours to make the spirit free. In the most general sense from its contrary: matter. The origin. of the conception may be illustrated by the fact that the Syriac term for it is Greek (iXvj). ,So long as the soul has not become drunk by the faith in God, in that it has received an impression of its powers, the weakness of the senses cannot be healed and it is not able to tread down with force visible matter, which is the screen before what is within and unperceived [by the senses]' 8). It is necessary to free one's self from matter, for freedom from matter precedes the bonds in God 4). It goes without saying that such sentences on the nature of matter are to be applied in the first place to the body. Matter is called a screen, the flesh a curtain 5). ,One of the saints says: The body becomes a comrade of sin; for it is afraid of troubles, thinking it may receive an injury and have to give up its life. For the spirit of God oppresses the body so that it dies; it is well known that it cannot vanquish sin unless it die. Who desires that our Lord should dwell in him, will oppress his body and minister unto his Lord those spiritual fruits which the Apostle describes; and he will guard his i ) p. 3 2 0
2) p. 1 7
4 ) p. 75 the sentence returns on p. 40
3 ) p. 2 5) p. 5 5 8
INTRODUCTION
XXIX
soul against the works of the flesh which Paul describes. For the body that is mingled with sin, takes pleasure in the works of the flesh. And the spirit of God takes pleasure in its own fruits. When the body is weak by fasting and mortification, the soul is spiritually strong through prayer. When the body is vehemently oppressed by solitude and penury and its life is near its term, it will beseech thee: Leave me a while to behave with moderation' x). In other words: the spiritual part of man has to live at the expenses of the body systematically. As matter is represented by the body, so the latter by the senses. , Without quiescence of the senses, peace of mind cannot be perceived' 2). It is worth while to observe, that Isaac does not always use the term (ril*.\H) in its relation to the body. He speaks also of the .senses of the soul; and he calls the heart the central organ of the inward senses s). He even uses the expressions ,the spiritual senses of the mind' 4) and ,the spiritual senses of the soul' 5). Man's purification, however, is more often expressed by Isaac as a purification from the affections (rtlx»). As a matter of fact, it is these which are considered as the more fearful and subtle enemy of the spiritualizing process of mysticism. Isaac quotes Euagrius: ,A purifying drug is the hot contrition of the soul, the which is given by the Lord through the angels to those who repent, that through diligence purification from the affections may be granted' 6). And parallel to this is what he says himself 7 ): ,As dissolving drugs purify the body from bad humours, so does the force of troubles "purify the heart from affections'. W h a t are the affections? ,Parts 8 ) of the usual current of the world. Where they have ceased, there the world's current has ceased. They a r e : love of riches; gathering of possessions; fatness of the body, giving rise to the tendency towards casual desire; love of honour which is the source of envy; exercising government; the pride and haughtiness of magistrates; folly; glory among men, which is the cause of cholar; bodily fear. When their current has been dammed, there the world, after their example, has to some extent ceased to be maintained I) p. 267 sq. 5) P- 5 r 4
2) p. 67 6
) p. 443 sq.
3) p. 29
4) p. 475
7) p. 540
8) p. 18 sq.
XXX
INTRODUCTION
and to exist'. A very vigorous description of the affections he gives in the following passage : Now, if the bosom of the earth, when the sunrays have ceased, preserves their heat for a long time, and if an aromatic smell and the odour of perfumes which spread through the air, remain a long time before they are dissipated and become effaced — how much more certain it is, that the affections, like dogs accustomed to lap up blood at the butcher's, will stand at the door barking when the usual food is withheld from them, till their old force has abated. Isaac repeatedly speaks of the affections of the body and the soul 3 ). He expressly utters his opinion concerning their nature. ,The affections of the body, are they naturally inherent in it, or of a secondary nature? A n d those which affect the soul, by the intermedation of the body, are they secondary or natural? T o call those of the body not natural, is impossible. A s to the soul — because it is known and universally confessed that purity belongs to its nature — no one will venture in view of this fact to maintain, that it is primarily affectable; for it is generally conceded that ailment is secundary to health and it is not possible that one and the same thingshould be of a good and an evil nature 8). This theory is closely connected with Isaac's — and the general mystical — theory about the soul, which is originally pure, but defiled by matter, the body, the senses 4 ). It is necessary to recur here to this view, because it explains Isaac's bifold view of the soul and the psychic domain: it is above the body, but connected with it and holding a middle position between body and spirit. This appears especially in Isaac's division of knowledge into three kinds. ,While his [viz. man's] knowledge and his behaviour are of a bodily nature, he is frightened by death. But when his knowledge is of a psychic nature and his behaviour is steadfast, his mind is moved by the thought of Judgment every moment. In the first state he is moved and guided by his knowledge and b y his discipline. A n d he is happy in the neighbourhood of God. But when he reaches true knowledge by the emotion of the apperception of God's mysteries and becomes confirmed in future hope, he
I) p. 481 2) p. 397, 474, 521 4) Book of the Dove, Introduction, p. LX.IV
3) P. 25
INTRODUCTION
XXXI
is consumed by love x ). When he however speaks from his spiritual height, his contempt for the psychic state, is manifest at once. ,He that has been deemed worthy of the taste of faith and then turns towards psychic knowledge, is the equal of him that has found a pearl of great price and changed it for a copper coin; for he has left authoritative freedom and turned towards the means of poverty which are full of the fear of bondship' 3). This estimation is to be compared to Paul's discrimination between psychic and pneumatic man 3). As a matter of fact, the Old Testament, in its tripartite division of man, holds nearly the same view. T h e spirit has been given by God and breathed into Adam's nostrils; it returns unto God when man dies. But his soul returns to the nether world whence it apparently comes; consequently it is ungodly, demoniacal. It is however, not very likely, that Isaac's psychology is inspired by the Old Testament or even by Paul. His ideas concord with those of Hellenism, as it will be shown beneath. But we have to return to the affections. Isaac is aware of the fact that they cannot wholly be purified away 4 ); still the state of being freed from them, apathy, the boon of martyrs and apostles, is one of the highest aims of the mystics. But here again it is to be kept in mind, that the three states in their pure form do not occupy three separate periods in the life of the mystic. It may be added here that the terms impulses, emotions (rtlj».ai), though often used in a sense similar to that of affections, cover a much wider field and have not always an evil meaning; they denote the whole activity of the invisible part of man, and even a single time even the ,emotions of the body' occur. A glance at the catchword impulses' in the Register will give a survey of the various connections in which it is used. It is not necessary to give a sketch of Isaac's views on anthropology and psychology; it would scarcely contain anything which is not to be found in the mystic sphere to which he belongs. It has been tried to characterize these views in the Introduction to the Book of the Dove, to which I may I) p. 429 sq. 3) I Cor. 2, 14
2) p. 366 4) P- 28
INTRODUCTION
XXXII
refer the r e a d e r H e r e there must be added that Isaac is an adherent of the theory of free will. ,Reason is the cause of freedom; and the fruit of both is liability to err. Without the first, the second would not be. And where the second is lacking, there the third is bound as it were with halters' 2 ). If there were no freedom, their would be no retribution: ,Good and evil are the offspring of freedom. Where the latter is lacking, practising the former is superfluous in view of remuneration. For nature knows no remuneration. Reward is destined for strife. Victory cannot be spoken of where there is no struggle. When opposition is taken away, freedom vanishes at the same time. Then nature remains without struggle. A time is preserved for the annihilation of freedom ; then a limited rationality comes into existence, among men as well as among the angels' 8). T h e last thought is explained by another passage : Man, therefore may freely go so far as to say: all excellence whatever, in body or in spirit, is in the realm of free will, as well as the mind that dominates the senses. But when the influence of the spirit reigns over the mind that regulates the senses and the deliberations, freedom is taken away from nature, which no longer governs, but is governed 4). This freedom is co-existent with ,the liability to err' (rc"A\a.iA\^si). ,Nor has He [God] made thee incapable of error, lest thou shouldst be like the beings which are bound, and thou shouldst receive thy good and thy evil without profit or remuneration, as the other corporeal beings on earth. How many blows and humiliations together with thanksgivings are born from the capacity for affections and fear and also of error, is manifest to every one; so that it should be known that our zeal for righteousness and our turning aside from evil are of our own will, and that the honour and disdain, caused thereby, should be put to our credit' 5). This liability of deviation incites us unto prayer: ,And as our Lord knows that H e does not take away liability of deviation before the cup of death [is drunk], and this being so, that man is near to a change from excellence to deterioration, and nature susceptible of accidents — therefore He urges us to continual beseechings' 6). i) p. LIX 4) P- 170
2) p. 3 5) P- 7i
3) p. 209 6) p. 503
XXXIH
INTRODUCTION
Even
the
perfect
remain
liable
to deviation. T h i s view is
maintained against the Mesalleyane in another p l a c e : , V a r y i n g states happen to every man like [changes of] the air. Understand it: to every m a n ; for nature is one. D o not think that he
is speaking to insignificant men only and that the perfect
are
exempt
from varying
states
and that they stand in one
class, without liability of deviation and without the impulse of the affections, as the Mesallayane say' 2). Still, man as the possessor of freedom could be a sovereign, if it were
not that he has not only connection with his own
inner world, but also with the impressions coming from without, with accidents and circumstances ( K l i / j ^ ) . , E v e r y apperc e p t i v e thing, be it action or word, is the revelation of what is hidden return
within,
if its
constantly.
cause
The
latter
be not entirely accidental, but element
only
is
considered
in
connection with r e w a r d ; the former is taken into consideration to a small
extent only. F o r the strength or the weakness of
will is evidenced in the doing of evil or of g o o d things, not by
anything
that
happens
freedom is the constant
accidentally;
repetition.
To
but the proof of its fate
sometimes even so as to dominate freedom of
is g i v e n will' 3 )
power;
etc.
And:
. . . ,that after these chaste and peaceful deliberations, accidents will or,
befall
the
at the time
that,
at
the
mind, that we should not be' sorry or despair of rest caused
time
of j o y ,
we
by
grace, be puffed up, but
should look
at trouble.
He4)
says, that we should not be sorry when accidents h a p p e n ; not that
we
should
not
resist
them,
nor
that
the
mind
should
accept them joyfully as something natural belonging to us, but that thou shouldst not despair even as the man who expected what is exalted a b o v e strife, and perfect rest' B) etc. Consequently man, who is clad with the body and endowed with
a soul and a spirit, has to oppress his material part, to
forget his relations with the world, to strip off his old customs, and to polish the mirror of his spirit so that it becomes a pure reflection of the D i v i n e ; for more than a reflector it is not. H o w can this take place? In general by asceticism.
Posses-
sions, refinement in dress, copious food, frequent rest, a comfortable dwelling-place
i ) Euagrius 4) Macarius
are the outward things the mystic has
2) p. 495 5) p. 496
3) p. 175
INTRODUCTION
XXXIV
to
renuncíate.
But
behaviour
(K'iaoi
in
recitation
which
there
is
more.
The
life
of discipline
or
or n^Hacwi) has to be arranged on a basis, of the Scriptures,
the service of
prayer,
fasting, and vigils h a v e a dominant place. This take
service,
place
however,
under
is not an opus operatum ; it has to
peculiar circumstances
and according to a
strict method which has to be expounded according to Isaac's chief points of view. T h e first condition for reaching spiritual life is solitude, for it purifies the soul from the affections.
,Labours cause apathy
and mortify our limbs on the earth and g i v e rest on the part of the
deliberations, For
only
solitude —
if they are combined with solitude the blessed Basil, the shining torch
of the whole world, says — of
the
soul' 1). A n d :
is the beginning of the purification
,When
a
man
has found solitude, the
soul is able to expel the affections and to test its own wisdom. T h e n the inward man will be stirred unto spiritual service and day
by
day
his soul'
he
will
perceive
the
hidden wisdom moving in
3).
Solitude not only purifies the soul, but it is the entrance to the
higher
world.
,Let
us
look
at ourselves
at the time of
service and prayer. If we possess contemplation regarding the words
of the
veracious
Psalms
solitude'
3).
and
of
prayer,
this
has
its
origin
in
A n d : ,Constant solitude, with recitation
and moderate food, easily arouse in the spirit a state of ecstasy, if
perpetual
brought
solitude
about
automatically,
by
be
works
not
broken
performed
for any
cause.
Insight
in solitude, will of itself
and suddenly, impart to these two eyes a kind
of baptism, by tears which burst forth and moisten the cheeks by their profuseness' 4). It is well known that regarding solitude the opinions of the Christian ascetics were divided. F r o m of old there were OzwpYjrmoi and rifayiJ.ariy.oi, the former adherents of a purely contemplative life,
the
latter
of
monkish life combined with works 5). Isaac
is a partisan of the former method which he advocates in his book.
,Compare all powers and signs that are worked in the
whole world with a man's consciously sitting in solitude. L o v e the ease
O p. 243 4) p- 139
of solitude rather than the satisfying of the hunger
2) p. 244 3) p. 339 5) The Book of the Dove, Introduction, p. X X I I I sqq.
INTRODUCTION
XXXV
of the world and the converting of the multitude of heathen peoples from error unto adoring God, Let it be more excellent in thy eyes to detach thyself from the bonds of sin than to detach the subject unto liberty from those who hold their bodies' a ). It appears — as can be understood — that not all brethren could bear solitude without work. To those it is allowed to perform some light work : ,If anyone is not able to bear solitude without service, he must necessarily have recourse to it. But he shall take it as a helpful means only, without eagerness and as a secondary thing, not as a principal commandment. This applies to the weak. Manual work is called by Euagrius an impediment to the recollection of God' 3). W e have seen that Isaac so decidedly clung to solitude that he even was not willing to go to visit his dying brother. Still, in a rather long exposition in the end of his book, he declares that there are cases in which the feeling of mercy can abrogate the commandment of solitude:" this holds good o o especially for those who have not yet climbed the highest summits of the mystic life 3). Solitude is especially considered as a means to forget the world, to extinguish the recollections of it in the heart, to banish distraction, and to reach concentration. ,For when thou risest for prayer and service instead of meditating worldly things, scriptural thoughts will be pictured in the mind. And thereby the recollection of that which it saw and heard before, will be forgotten and effaced in it. So thy mind will reach purity' 4). Still, recollections cannot wholly be effaced; they only loose their sharp character. ,Works performed carefully by the pure, do not remove the impression of the recollection of previous reprehensible things; but they abolish in the mind the painful nature of recollection, so that what has passed through the mind often enough, now becomes something excellent' 6). Further the mind has to give up distraction aad occupations. ,That a man, who is beset with care, should be quiet and in a state of peace, is impossible. For the necessary things which cohere with those things, upon he which expends his labour, cannot but have the effect that he be shaken; and they will bereave him of his rest and quiet. For the only opportunity
I) p- 45 4) P- 53
2
) P- 57 5) P- 8
3) P- 565 sqq.
INTRODUCTION
XXXVI
for Satan to enter the soul is distraction' 1 ). F o r distraction is obnoxious
to
chastity:
distraction. T h i n g s do
not
No
one who
who
allow
a
which
thee
to
to
cling
distraction,
stain,
dejectedness,
lovest
happen to
loves distraction,
is given
without
,If thou
chastity
with
is chaste 2).
do not l o v e
to thee through distraction
should
is impossible'
chastity,
watchfulness. T h a t a man
guard
truth in his soul
Moreover
it gives birth to
of the most fearful enemies of the mystic:
one
,Dejection is caused by distraction of mind; distraction by neglect of labours and recitation and by intercourse left to chance' 3). So
the mind
which
shows
has
the
works
exalt
passes
behaviour.
that
to be concentrated. Strikingly, in a way
his personal experience, Isaac has described the
first tentative spiritual
has
of the
mind towards concentration and
, A y o u n g bird without wings is the mind
lately left the bonds of the affections, b y means of of repentance. A t the time of prayer it strives to
itself a b o v e earthly things, but it cannot. F o r it creeps
still on the surface of the earth, where also the serpent crawls. But
it concentrates
its
deliberations
by recitation and works
and fear and care for excellent qualities. F o r beyond these it does
yet know anything. A n d these k e e p the mind pure
not
for a short and
time. But then recollections will return, troubling
defiling the heart.
of peace
F o r he does not yet perceive the air
and liberty, which concentrates the heart for a long
time,
[keeping
things'
4).
it]
quiet
without
It is especially
the recollection of [worldly]
prayer which is a cause of concen-
tration. ,If anyone a s k s : H o w is it that only at this time [viz. the
time
of
prayer] these
great and
unspeakable
gifts
are
g r a n t e d ? W e answer: Because at this time, more than in any other
hour,
man is concentrated
and
prepared to look unto
G o d and to desire and to expect compassion from Him' 5). How
necessary
a
condition
for mystical life perpetual con-
centration is, appears from the following passage. he
[viz.
the
mystic]
, A b o v e all
chooses concentration and reclusion with
himself alone, to be quiet and shut off and lonely and left to himself in
a
solitary
place, void of all beings and separated
from the whole creation' 6). Mortification, solitude, service and concentration produce in
i ) p- 130 4) P- 92
2) p. 445 5.) p.
171
3) p. 383 6) p. 5 1 5
XXXVII
INTRODUCTION
the mystic the state favourable for mystic progress. This state can be characterized in several ways. But it is usually considered from the point of view that the soul (heart, spirit mind) has recovered the purity and clearness which is its peculiar property. ,Perpetual tears during prayer are a sign of divine mercy of which the soul is worthy because of its repentance which has been accepted; and with tears it begins to enter the plain of serenity' In a characteristic way this state is described in the following passage: ,One of the saints who was then an old ascetic, had become so pure and simple and had reached such a perfection and serenity, that he was nearly as a babe, having forgotten all worldly things. And perhaps many will not believe what we say (for it is a real wonder) that even at the time of the oblation of the Eucharist he could not observe [the [fast] so as to receive the Eucharist; he did not even know whether he had observed [the fast] or not, till his disciples kept watch on him in his cell and brought him to the sanctuary as a little boy. So very serene and pure was this blessed man. And being thus in worldly things, in his soul he was perfect with God' 2). In the following passage the serene soul is compared with a mirror, one of the metaphorical designations beloved with the Eastern mystics: ,Also this I advise thee, o my brother, that in all thy dicipline the scale of mercy be preponderant; through this thou wilt perceive God's mercy for the world. Our own state becomes to us a mirror in which we behold the true Prototype in those things which naturally belong to that Essence. By these things and the like we become illuminated so as to be in motion unto God, with a serene mind. A heart wicked from of old, cannot become serene' 3). More frequent than serenity is the term purity, which is also used in connection with the mirror. Isaac tells how Pachomius had asked from God the gift, that he could do without sleep. ,Then this gift was granted him, as he had asked, for a long time. And because his heart was pure — the sight of his soul having been purified through vigils and solitude and prayer —• he saw God, who is invisible, as in a mirror' 4 ). Purity is the necessary condition and at the same time the i ) p. 384
2) p. 251
3) p. 455
4) p- 564
INTRODUCTION
XXXVIII
soil for spiritual gifts. the
affections,
, W h e n a man has reached purity from
what
no
eye
has seen and no ear has heard
what has not entered into the heart of man to ask in prayer, is revealed from
to
him by
mysteries
spring
and
is wont
to
purity,
spiritual work
which ceases not any moment
visions.
unto
the
And
what the force of
nature
of the earth, this
g r a c e works unto the soul b y purity'
1 ).
A n d ,it has been said
that the things of G o d come of their own, if there is a pure and undefiled place. T h a t they come of their own, means that it naturally belongs to purity that heavenly light shines in it, without investigation and labour on our part. F o r in the pure heart, the new heaven is s t a n p e d ;
of which the sight is light
and the room is spiritual. A s also in another place it is said: A s the magnet-stonen has the natural faculty to attract atoms of iron, so has spiritual k n o w l e d g e [the faculty to attract] the pure h e a r t ' 2 ) . It need hardly
be said that the term ,the pure in h e a r t ' 3 )
(Matthew 5, 8) acquires an especially mystical exegesis. W h e n the soul has been purified, its original nature becomes visible; and
as
this
nature
is divine, it appears in the- divine aspect
of serenity; so it enters the state of illumination. T h i s term is frequently found in mystical works, and the mystics themselves are
often
called
the
illuminate.
,As
the face of the earth is
gladdened by the rays of the sun when the dense atmosphere is torn
asunder,
so
the
words
of prayer
are
able
to
tear
a w a y and to remove from the soul the dark cloud of the affections
and to gladden and to illuminate the spirit by the rays
of j o y and consolation, which is born in our deliberations' 4). Gradually, and
service,
by
constant
the
mystic
perfection; the and
the
is the
bodily
has
and
How
reached
solitude
the third state, that of
psychic stages h a v e passed a w a y ,
to
of the mystic; in this sphere divine gifts are
him.
This
however
up his feeling of humility. of his
concentration,
spirit has become free and monarchic. T h e spiritual
element
granted
purification,
course; highly
it remains
Isaac
does not induce him to g i v e
Humility his
estimates
stands at the beginning
constant humility,
attitude
till the end.
may
seen
be
in
his
beautiful last chapter, which is wholly devoted to it. T h e spiritual state I) p. 519 s q .
can also be styled as that of s i g h t ; for Isaac, like 2) p. 522 sq.
3) p. 50, 564
4) p. 124 sq.
XXXIX
INTRODUCTION
other mystics considers true mystic life as one of sight as opposed to hearing, which belongs to a lower state. So it is not amazing that frequent use is made of the term contemplation, which in general means the spiritual attitude of the mind regarding things which its meets, but also denotes the outlook on mystical scalities. ,Because such men have reached the summit of purity and because at all times their inner emotions are stirring in prayer, — as I have said before — the Spirit, whenever it looks at them, will find them in prayer; and from there it will conduct them by contemplation, which is interpreted spiritual sight' 3). So high is the value of spiritual contemplation that it is identified with the kingdom of heaven 3). That, however, contemplation even extends to cosmic sight, appears from Isaac's sentence: ,For the Father quickens the soul that has died the death of Christ, in contemplation of all the worlds' 4). This is not amazing in view of the fact, that the elevation of the mind is often described as a voyage through the Universe 6 ). That contemplation and sight partake of the character of revelation, is taught by the following passage: ,There is a difference between vision and revelation. T h e name of revelation covers the two, because it denotes the revealing of a thing that hitherto was hidden and now becomes manifest in any way. But not all that is revelation, is at the same time vision. But what is vision, is also called revelation, because it is a hidden thing which is revealed. But not all that comes to be revealed and known, is vision' 6). States of spiritual intensity usually rise during prayer. Prayer has a mighty purifying power, it drives away the cloud of the affections 7). .Therefore, my brother of this thou mayest be sure: that the power of the mind to use the emotions with discernment, has its limit in purity during prayer. When the mind has reached this point, it will either turn backwards, or it will desist from prayer; so prayer is, as it were, a mediator between the psychic and the spiritual state' 8). Prayer becomes an occasion for receiving spiritual gifts. ,What time is so holy and fit for sanctification and the receiving of gifts as the time of prayer, in which man speaks with God? 2 l ) Book of the Dove, Introduction, p. 53 J P- 260 4) p. 544 5) See Philo I, 1 6 ; Book of the Dove, p. 53 6) p. 249 7) p. 124 8) p. 169
3) p. 528
INTRODUCTION
XL
A t this time man utters his desires unto G o d , beseeching H i m and
speaking
are
concentrated
of G o d
with
Him
from
and his whole emotion and thought
all
alone he thinks
sides and
upon Him with compulsion;
Him
alone he supplicates; his
whole thought is absorbed in discourse with Him and his heart is full of Him.
It is in this state,
therefore, that the Holy
G h o s t joins to the things which man prays some unattainable insights,
which it stirs in him in accordance with his aptitude
of being moved' So
prayer
may pass into sight. ,Sometimes from prayer a
certain contemplation is born which also m a k e s prayer vanish from
the
lips.
And
he to whom this contemplation
happens,
becomes as a corpse without a soul, by ecstasy. T h i s we call sight
during
phantasy,
prayer
as
fools
and
not
say.
an
Also
image
in
this
or
form forged
contemplation
by
during
prayer there are degrees and differences in gifts. But till here there the
is still prayer. F o r deliberation has not yet passed into state
where there
is no prayer, but rather a state supe-
rior to it. F o r the motions of the tongue and the heart during prayer, are keys. W h a t comes after them, is entering into the treasury.
Here
all
mouths
and
tongues are silent, and
treasurer of the deliberations, the governer of
the
heart,
the
senses, the daring spirit, that swift bird, and all the sub-
sidiaries
the
then
and
the
use
which is in them, and the persuasions,
have to stand still t h e r e : for the master of the house has come'. ,For as the whole force of the laws and the commandments which
God
has
laid
down
for
mankind,
h a v e their term in
the purity of the heart, according to the word of the Fathers, so
all
kinds
and habits of prayer with which mankind prays
unto G o d ; have their term in pure prayer. selfhumiliations
and
beseechings
and
inner
Lamentations and supplications
sweet tears and all other habits which prayer possesses —
and as
I h a v e said: their boundary and the domain within which they are
set
has
crossed
wards,
into
motion, the
is pure prayer.
boundary
there is neither
As
soon
as the spirit
of pure prayer and proceeded on-
prayer,
nor emotions, nor tears, nor
authority, nor freedom, nor beseechings, nor desire, nor longing after or in
any the
I ) p. 173 sq.
of those things, which are hoped for in this world world to be.
T h e r e f o r e there is no prayer b e y o n d
XLI
INTRODUCTION
pure prayer, and all its emotions and habits conduct the spirit thus far by their authority with freedom 1 ). It seems that Isaac uses the term spiritual prayer in nearly the same sense as the term pure prayer. He argues with some fervour, that spiritual prayer cannot be prayed at all, nay that it is blasphemy to say so 3 ). Significant for the distinction between prayer and spiritual prayer is Isaac's exposition on p. 5 19. ,If a man asks in prayer for deliverance from temptations, rest from struggles, victory over the affections, consolation and so on, and if he asks these things with the right intention and a mournful heart, God will condescend to grant him his wish. to the mysteries which belong to the spirit, namely the emotions during spiritual prayer, and the entering of the mind behind the curtain of the holy of holies, and the apperception of the indestructible inheritance — if a man does not pay their dues, G o d is not willing to grant them, even if the whole creation should beseech in behalf of him. Their dues are purity of soul' 3 ). Prayer is one of the favourite subjects of Isaac. It seems (even) that he uses the term, constant prayer' as a designation of the spiritual state. ,What is the acme of all the labours of asceticism, which a man, when he has reached it, recognises as the summit of his course? When he is deemed worthy of constant prayer. When he has reached this, he has touched the end of all virtues and forthwith he has a spiritual dwellingplace. If a man has not received in truth the gift of the Comforter, it is not possible for him to accomplish constant prayer in quiet. When the spirit takes its dwelling-place in a man, he does not cease to pray, because the spirit will constantly pray in him. Then, neither when he sleeps, nor when he is awake, will prayer be cut off from his soul; but when he eats, and when he drinks, when he lies down, or when he does any work, even when he is immersed in sleep, the perfumes of prayer will breathe in his soul spontaneously. A n d henceforth he will not possess prayer at limited times, but always; and when he has outward rest, even then prayer is ministered unto him secretly. F o r the silence of the serene is prayer, says a man clad with Christ' 4). Isaac considers I) p. 165 sq.
the mystic way as one of knowledge, and 2) p. 168
3) P. 519
4) P. 259
INTRODUCTION
XLII
his whole system is one of knowledge. But — as is the case with the other mystics of his type — the term knowledge is a kind of disguise. As the whole way is divided in three parts, so knowledge is of three kinds and reaches its summit in spiritual knowledge. ,How knowledge is subtilized and acquires spirituality so that it resembles the discipline of those invisible forces, the service of which is not performed by the apperceptive practice of works but by the thoughts of intellect — hear this now. When knowledge elevates itself above earthly things and the thought of service and begins to try its impulses in things hidden from eyesight, and when it partly despises the recollection of [worldly] things from which proceeds the perversion of the affections, and when it stretches itself upwards and clings to faith by the thought of the world to be, and the love of the promises and investigation concerning the hidden things — then faith swallows knowledge, gives anew birth to it, being wholly spiritual. Then it is able to direct its flight towards non-bodily places and to scrutinize the depths of the unscrutable ocean of wonderful and divine government which directs intelligible and apperceptible beings, and to examine spiritual mysteries which are attained by the simple and subtle intellect. Then the inner senses awake to spiritual service, as the order of things which will be in the state of immortality and incorruptibility. For from here onwards they have received intelligible resurrection, symbolically, as a true sign of that universal renewal. These are the three degrees of knowledge, in which the whole course of man is contained, that of body, soul and spirit. From the time that a man begins to distinguish between good and evil, till he leaves the world, in these three degrees is contained the knowledge of himself and the accomplishment of all iniquity and wickedness and the summit of all righteousness ; and the scrutiny of the depths of all spiritual mysteries is worked by one knowledge in these three degrees' 2). Knowledge gives birth to love. ,The flower of spiritual knowledge is divine love, which has its origin in radiant insights which are found by the spirit during prayer. Love is the fruit of prayer, which, through contemplation arising in it, draws the mind towards a predilection which never becomes satisfied' 8). I ) p. 3 6 9 sqq.
2)
P- 373 sq.
3) P- 475
INTRODUCTION
XLIII
,When he [viz. man] reaches true knowledge by the motion of the apperception of God's mysteries and becomes confirmed in future hope, he is consumed by love Love is the dissolver of temporary life. H e that has reached the love of God, does not desire to stay here any more' ,What is the perfection of all spiritual fruits? This is when man is deemed worthy of the complete love of God. And how can he that has reached this point, acquire certainty? Every time when the thought of God is stirred in his spirit, the heart will become hot with love at once, the eyes will shed multitudinous tears; for love is accustomed to shed tears at the recollection of the beloved. H e that is in this state, will never be found destitute of tears, because he is never without abundant recollection of God, so that even during sleep he speaks with Him. Love is accustomed to practise these things and this is the accomplishment of man in this life ' 3). This high spiritual state is often described through the image of drunkenness. ,Then there arises in him that sweetness of God and the flame of His love which burns in the heart and kindles all the affections of body and soul. And this power he will perceive in all the species of the creation and all things which he meets. From time to time he will become drunk by it as by wine; his limbs will relax, his mind will stand still and his heart will follow God as a captive. And so he will be, as I have said, like a man drunk by wine. And according as his inner senses are strengthened, so this sight will be strengthened. And according as he is careful about discipline and watchfulness and applies himself to recitation, so the power of sight will be firm based and bound in him. In truth, my brethren, he that reaches this from time to time, will not remember that he is clad with a body, nor will he know that he is in this world' 3). A n d : ,How is it that the service of hope is so delightful, and its labours so few and its work so easy to the soul? This is because it excites the natural longing in the soul and gives them this cup to drink and makes them drunk. And from this moment they nevermore perceive fatigue but become apathetic against troubles. And during the whole of their course it is to them as if they were moving in the air without bodily motion, without seeing anything of the diffii ) p. 430
2) p. 261 sq.
3) p. 337 sq.
INTRODUCTION
XLIV
culty of the road or the streams and hills that are before them ; but rough places become to them smooth and difficult places level, because they always see the bosom of their F a t h e r ' J ) . Such states come near to ecstasy which is often described by Isaac. ,Sometimes from prayer a certain contemplation is born, which also makes prayer vanish from the lips. A n d he to whom this contemplation happens, becomes as a corpse without soul, by ecstasy. This we call sight during prayer' 2 ). Also in other passages there appears to be a close connection between prayer and ecstasy 3 ). One of the saints is reported by Isaac to have told him: ,When I desire to stand performing service, I am allowed to accomplish one m a r m i t a (one fifteenth part of the Psalter). Further,. even if I remain standing during three d a y s , I am in ecstasy with G o d ; without perceiving fatigue' 4 ). A n d another Father tells this: ,On one day, such as this in which I was wont to take food (and since four days I had not eaten), when I rose in order to perform evening service and to eat afterwards, I stood in the room of my cell in full sunlight. I perceived only that I began with the m a r m i t a which is the beginning of service; but till the next day when the sun rose before me, and the clothes on my body became warm, I did not perceive where I was. A s the sun troubled me by burning my face, my mind came back to me and behold, I saw that it was a new day' E). A n d concerning another of the saints it is said that he remained in ecstasy during four days 6 ). A n d it is probably Isaac himself who experienced ecstasy during sleep, caused by his recitation the foreigoing night 7 ). A s I have sai'd, the state of unification is very seldom mentioned by Isaac. T h e passage cited above on p. x x v i refers to the unification in the world to be. ,The incomprehensible unification' mentioned on p. 1 6 9 occurs in a passage borrowed from Dionysius the A r e o p a g i t e ; and ,union with God', p. 4 6 2 , is a quotation from Euagrius. It is to be remembered, however, that Isaac very often speaks of the state of transition and forgetting of the world, a state which, if not identical, still bears a strong likeness with that of union. T h e mystic, when he has reached the height of spiritual life, I) p. 5 1 1 sq. 5) p. 389
2) p. 164 6) p. 261
3) p. 166, 174, 261 7) p. 492. Cf. above p. XXI
4) p. 388
XLV
INTRODUCTION
has not reached the mystic ideal of spiritual rest. F o r he remains exposed to changes. T h e y are considered by the mystics in two ways. In themselves they are of an inferior nature Isaac has a chapter 3) with the title : ,On the many varying states
which
And
cling
to
the
mind
and are purified by prayer'.
chapter 48 bears the inscription : ,On the v a r y i n g states
of light and darkness to which the soul is subject at all times, and the
on the training it acquires in things of the right and of left hand'.
and
by
the
God
mystic
sends they
them
can
for the
be
used
as
sake of education, a criterium of his
degree in behaviour 3). It is the mystic's fate that, as long as he is in this world, varying nature
states
will accompany
him. , T h a t the whole rational
is liable
to
deviation without discrimination, and that
states
pass
through every man at all times, the dis-
varying
criminate is able to understand from many [symptoms]; moreover the experiences of every day are wholly sufficient to make him prudent, if he is cautious and k e e p s to what is his domain. [They
also
show
him] how
unrest
work
upon
the
passes
from
peace
to
many v a r y i n g states of rest and
mind
every
day,
so that it suddenly
perturbation
without any reason at all
and comes into unspeakable danger'
A n d , citing E u a g r i u s :
,There
are
perhaps
states
of
of cold, and soon there-after of h e a t ; and and
hail,
soon
there-after of serenity.
It is thus
for our instruction. Strife, then the help of grace. A n d times
the
soul
runs
into
storm,
some-
and h e a v y billows assail it;
then there comes a different state and it is visited by
grace;
then
chaste,
joy
fills
the
heart
and peace
from
God
and
peaceful deliberations' 4). IV ISAAC'S
PLACE
IN
ORIENTAL
THOUGHT
It is not amazing, but only natural, that Isaac will prove to belong to Hellenism in its general sense. A f t e r what has been said on the relation between Semitic mysticism and Hellenism in the introduction to the translation of the B o o k of the D o v e , it will
only
be
necessary
to define Isaac's place more accu-
1) Book of the Dove, Introduction, p. X C V 3) Title of chapter 70 4) p. 495 sq.
2) n°. 64
XLVI
INTRODUCTION
rately. If it is allowed to anticipate the result of the following enquiry, I may state here already, that two systems of Hellenistic thought have especially influenced Isaac's spiritual attitude : the religious and philosophic school of Alexandria, and the Stoics. Even the form of Isaac's thoughts and, consequently of the present book, bears this Hellenistic stamp. A large part of Isaac's book consists of sentences; again and again he returns to this way of communicating his thoughts, a way already known to the old Greek philosophers but especially trodden by their Hellenistic posterity. One of the chief representatives of the Stoa, Epictetus, has remained popular till to day on account of the sententious character of his Encheiridion, a characteristic which seems to suit the Stoic doctrine excellently. A s to the Neoplatonists, Porphyry has written a kind of introduction to the doctrine in the form of sentences. In the same way the Neopythagoraeans had their collections of sentences, ascribed to P y t h a g o r a s A n d Johannes Stobaeus has, as it were, reduced Greek literature to a vast collection of sentences. That Christianity followed these examples appears e.g. from the collection made by the monks Antonius and Maximus in the domain of Christian literature in Greek. Finally the Muslims imitated this method of collecting wisdom in a concise form. But we have to show the close relationship between Isaac and the two forms of Hellenism mentioned above, for the whole series of ideas which make up Isaac's view of life. The closest relationship will appear to exist between Isaac and Philo. In the second range stand Plotinus and the Stoa. Apart from any definite ideas, Philo has already an important thing in common with Isaac, viz. his mystic attitude. He is dealing with facts and thought which it is forbidden to communicate to vulgar eyes and ears: xaijxa, S ¡luaxai, vtzxaBap-
[J.ivoi xy. ¿TO, 6$ hoy. ovrco; 'k-jzxy.ow. '/j/y-k xacg iavx¿>v nxpa^s/jaOs xal ¡j.r/hA T«V ¿¡vjr,xwj b/Xakwaxi"). And: oxi -¿.cxpuyQaitfVxsv kpbv Ticpi tow aysmrzov xcci xuv dwxtieoiv odixoO ¡jMcxyv Xoyov 3). And
again he speaks of the ar,bppr,xa filoGocpiag - J l r f j y j ; 4 ) . And very often he addresses his readers with: Z ¡vjaxai and speaks in terms borrowed from the language of the mysteries 5). Further 1) The last edition of the Syriac recension by G. Levi Della Vida ( Rivista Degli Studi Orientali, III). 2) I 14733 3) x i y 4 i 4) x 6 s s 1 5) I
131
1 4 7 33 ? 5 5 8 32, I 7 3 32 ?
1 0 1 13, 1 0 7
30
,
1 4 6 «
2S
9
27 ? ¡ 5 7 0 17j H
I g
14.
XLVII
INTRODUCTION
Philo, in interpreting the Holy Scriptures, makes conscious use of the allegorical method; the literal sense is to him the form which conceals the mystical sense. This method, as we have seen above, was also applied by Isaac and the Christian mystics in general. How far Philo's influence goes in this domain, appears from a striking example. Speaking of Isaac's allegorical method, we have cited above 1 ) his interpretation of the thorns and thistles which the earth produces since man's fall as the affections This interpretation occurs already in Philo's Legum Allegoriae. Commenting on the thorns and thistles he says: 9u.7 xi fjixai vsA [iXaaxavzi iv afpovog ''{y/l xa. xcvxovvxa /.v.l xixp-icxovxa a'jxrjV tmOy] -/ '")>//. tj'j/'A/.w '):/.'/:/j'j.z vs/jry.i'j. It is not necessary that Isaac should have read Philo's works; but, in view of their popularity among the early Christians, it is very probable that portions of them did reach the Syrian's. There is another general view of the world which Isaac has in common with Philo, but which is not Philo's property in particular, viz. Platonic dualism. ,Every apperceptible thing' says Isaac 8 ), ,fact or word, is the appearance of that which is hidden within'. And the terms apperceptible (rtflix^iAvsj) and intelligible (r^i^.-uAisa) are among the commonest in Isaac's treatises-, they occur as frequently in Philo's works, where also the /¿i-i/jz -j'j-r-iz and the xoc>[j.og ahOr/Xog are mentioned 4). It is worth while to observe here that it is already Philo who maintains that apperceptible things have no reality: . . xb. atVS/j-a r.avxa [rj/^] xv. 7zpog ¿j/rfJiw.v ovxa 5), a doctrine which is also held by our Christian and Muslim mystics who compare this world with a mirror which reflects the only reality, God ,the Being, the Essence ( r s i r C A v a & u p f , 6 ovtco^ mv°), 0 npog zlrjOsiav cov7). In reality the system is monistic. Philo, as regards dualism, proves a true Platonist. ,When the mind elevates itself and becomes initiated in the Lord's mysteries, it thinks the body something evil and hostile' 8). And he even with Plato calls the body a dungeon 9). W e have seen, that according to Isaac and his fellow-mystics the soul is of a divine nature. This doctrine was familiar to the Platonic school, as well as to the Stoa. It is shared by
1) p. X X V
2) Syriac text p. 204
4) I 419, 424, 619, 648; II 490 7) II 22 3
8) I 101
13
3) p. 175 5) I 4 8 2 ^ 9) I 485
2
6) II 1926
INTRODUCTION
XL VIII
Philo
(3sta tyvyYi -1). In
his
commentary
on
the
story
of
the
creation, h e c o m e s across the s t a t e m e n t that man was c r e a t e d as G o d ' s i m a g e . It can hardly b e doubted that the old n a r r a t o r referred this to m a n ' s bodily stature. Philo, on the o t h e r hand, argues that this is impossible, for G o d is i n c o r p o r e a l ; the real image
of
God
is the human s o u l : h o" sixav lehxxai
-/.axd xov
tyvyjig Tr/s/JwW vovv 3).
T?Jg
E x a c t l y the s a m e a r g u m e n t is in I s a a c ' s b o o k . this,
that
, W e believe
G o d has not m a d e His i m a g e o f affectable
nature.
H i s i m a g e I do not call the b o d y , but the soul, which is invisible. In e v e r y i m a g e the likeness o f the a r c h e t y p e is e x p r e s s e d ' s ) . The
last
sentence
6vyjg
xaxa
xov dpyjxvnov
But
this
is a l m o s t
divine
soul
literally
xov aixiov loyov dwells
in
in
Philo:
trjg dvQp-Wov
dnzixoviaQdoyg4).
the b o d y and is c o n n e c t e d
with it. It has to b e purified. I s a a c ' s whole s c h e m e o f t h e way o f the mystic, which was expounded a b o v e , is already in Philo and the Neoplatonists. away his
the
affections.
vulgar
state,
the
yjbr-.y.'. d' ou navxayoij They
have
compares
to
the
butcher's7), dnsixxZsi xx
Purification consists chiefly in purifying G o d ' s spirit does not dwell with man in
be
affections
purged
TIZOY] 8
with
).
away:
to
be
dvaxaOdpai
with
dogs
beasts
and
banished
first:
¿n' ¿pri[XGV TtaOav xai xsousSv 6 ).
6 loyog ovxog all'
affections
Philo
have
lapping birds:
xo ndQog6). up
blood
Qypioig
Isaac at the
nai nx-sivoig
A p a t h y is the ideal o f Philo as well as of
Isaac : s'av yap ¿1zdOeia xaxdrr/yj xtyvyjiv It is well known that S t o i c
Xcliwg £vdat[j.ovrt(j£i9).
philosophy c o n d e m n s the affec-
tions in an equally e m p h a t i c way. Still I s a a c avows that the affections are destined to b e auxiliaries.
, All existing affections a r e given to b e a help to e a c h
of
natures
the
growth
to
o f which
which
they
naturally
belong
and
for the
they were given by G o d . T h e bodily affec-
tions a r e placed by G o d in the b o d y for the s a k e o f the profit and
the
growth
o f the b o d y ; and the psychic affections, i.e.
the psychic powers for t h e s a k e o f the growth and the profit o f the soul'
10 ).
E x a c t l y the s a m e t h e o r y is expounded by Philo.
H e a r g u e s that the senses are auxiliaries (fioyOog, riUi.KXi^); and that even the four real a f f e c t i o n s : voluptuousness, desire, sorrow
1) 1 1568 4) 1 33237 8) I 68 «
2) I 16 ' 5) I 120 37 9) I 8 S
3) p. 2iaPu Cf. 126, 169. 6) I 72 15 10) p. 25
7) p. 481
XL1X
INTRODUCTION
and fear, have their utility by which they ,help' the soul 1 ). Isaac has elaborately treated the question concerning the nature of the affections 2 ). T h e result is that they naturally belong to the b o d y ; but that there is such a close union between body and soul that the latter, though not naturally a a receptacle of affections, participates in them, so that both ,affections of the body' and ,affections of the soul' are frequent expressions in Isaac's work. T h e question is an old one, as Isaac says himself (p. 21). It has been treated at length by Plotinus in the opening chapters of the Enneades. H e has answered it in the same sense as Isaac. H e argues that the soul is a beingo of its own and," o for this reason, not subject to the affections of the body. Still, the soul being the body's vivifying partner, there is an influence of the latter on the f o r m e r ; not a direct one, however, but through a kind of medium of a composite nature. It has been said a b o v e 3 ) that Isaac assigns to the soul a middle position between the body and the spirit, and consequently, consider^ it as being of an ambiguous nature. It is again Philo who has expressed the same view: dvoiv d'ovzwj MV rt riixsxspa tyvyji c'j'j(v ~.{/.i'.y. v.'/.vyj>g7) and calls those who love 8 God the highest kings ). A n d some of the Stoics 9) as well as Plotinus 10) and his school n ) defend the same view. Isaac's term betrays its technical character. A s a matter of fact the corresponding idea was known to Philo a l r e a d y : zaxi .'//. fyvyjig
v/A
av.oto)
ou-iJ.cc a
vor^d
diaxpifisiv jSXsTKiV
6).
W e have seen above 7) that according to Isaac man's spiritual part has to live at the expense of his body. This is Philo's theory too : £cop.cV xbv i W v w Odvaxov, xs6vr,xau.-v Oc xbv tmvw ¡3iov is one of Herakleitos' sentences, which Philo interprets in this i ) I, 4595
2) Diatribae
I, i
3) ed. Cousin I , p. 68 4) p. 1 7 6 5) Epictetus, Diatribae I , cap. 6, 1 4 , 1 6 ; I I I , cap. 1 7 : Enneads Providentia. Proclus, ed. Creuzer § C X X . Philo, ed. Aucher, De 6) I, 4 6 6 2 0 sqq. 7) p. 3 2 sq.
III, 2 § 3 ; III, 3 § 2 ;
LI
INTRODUCTION
sense that he soul's life is the body's death 1). And is it not Philo who has erected a monument to asceticism in his De vita contempla tiva ? This expression ,death of the soul' which so often occurs in Isaac's treatises will remind Christian readers of the metaphorical use of the term death so familiar to them from the New Testament. It is again to be accentuated that the idea is not especially Christian, but Hellenistic. Philo repeatedly speaks of the death of the soul 3). And Plotinus was well acquainted with the idea : xal 6 Oc/.vc/.zog ai>xfh xai zxt iv za aapazi fic(ianzi xxo^oväija-xi ¡¿¿AKOVTX (Antonius et Maximus, p. 22). And Philo I 380 39 : Ssyj.x IXH CUI TfÖTSfOv L^CPIYYITO x TRFP/IFVPCIV xl TOV HVVITOÖ ßiov xsvxi O-TTOVSXI , SRIZVTX kvtrca; . . • TPE$ TJJV TOV aysvvvjTov 7rxy>tahyv xxi xoilntov öixv s7rsi%i>ivxi. — Plotinus, Enncades IV, 8, § I points to the Platonic origin of the comparison, and uses it himself § 4, speaking of the soul: i7na-T(xtyfi unfathomable conviction; and if the heart has acquired, without forethought, the habit of being captured so that it does no longer [perceive] earthly things, through continual intercourse with our Saviour, and thou possessest knowledge so as to distinguish the different designations of this intercourse, when thou hearest them — solitude cultivated without interruption will make it easy to the soul to acquire the taste of these. T h e y disappear however, after having been present, through the neglect of those who have received them, and for a long time they do not reappear.
THAT WE CAN UNDERSTAND THE DEGREE ETC.
327
On account of these, man ventures to adduce with confidence the testimony of his own mind; so the blessed Paul s a y s : F o r I am persuaded that neither death, nor life, nor things present, nor things to come, nor any other thing shall be able to separate me from the love of Christ 1 ). Then should bodily and psychic trouble, or persecution or hunger, or nakedness or loneliness, or captivity or danger or the sword? No, not even the angels of Satan, nor his powers with their evil cunning; nor glory which makes efforts by its alluring flatteries ; nor oppressions and scorn by their vain blows. If these things, my brother, to a larger or lesser extent have not begun to show themselves in thy soul, thy labours and troubles and all thy solitude are vain efforts. A n d even 488 if miracles were wrought by thy hands and thou shouldst quicken the dead, this would be, nothing in comparison with the absence of these. A n d it is becoming that thou arousest thy self and with tears beseechest the Saviour of the world that He may take away the veil from the heart, and disperse from the inner firmament the darkness of the clouds of the affections; and that thou mayest be deemed worthy of seeing the rays of daylight. Then thou wilt not dwell in darkness as one who is dead for ever. Continual vigils with recitation and frequent kneelings performed between, will not fail one day to give this good to him that is diligent. F o r those that have found them, have found them through these works. A n d those who will find them, will be able to do so through these works. A n d while we are constantly abiding in solitude, performing these works, and the mind is not bound by any thing or any man without the soul, then by the works of inward excellence we shall soon find in ourselves a partial, but veracious apperception of them and we shall acquire certainty also concerning the rest. Those who, while abiding in solitude, have experienced God's lovingkindness, do not need much persuasion. Nor is their soul sick by the affection of unbelief as those who doubt the truth. T h e witness of their mind is for them sufficient persuasion, more than myriads of words not founded on experience. 1) Cf. Rom. 8, 38
328
ON T H E INFLUENCES PROCEEDING FROM
GRACE
LXXI 489 O N T H E I N F L U E N C E S P R O C E E D I N G F R O M
GRACE
Thou must perpetually place a token in thy soul, and pay attention to it. A n d when thou perceivest that divine care begins to reveal itself to the soul, then understand that thou art near the harbour of purity. As soon as man begins to be lifted up above the affections, this holy force will cling to the soul, without leaving it, day or night, showing it God's providence. A n d even the particulars of what is and comes to pass, of yes and no, what happens to a man secretly and manifestly and the facts relating to the creation of this world, are revealed to the soul by that force which clings to it and which reveals to it the creative power of God and shows it divine providence which, without a break, follows and visits this whole creation. A n d it shows the soul how this providence follows man at all times, and, though he does not perceive it and does not know it, preserves him against adversities at all times and directs him towards what serves for the salvation and the rest of his soul and body and to gain life. Now this divine force, which works all these, shows itself secretly to man, by intelligible revelation to his spiritual nature, which is intellect. W h e n man has been deemed worthy to receive this power within his soul, he abides only in ecstasy and silence and tears which always flow as water, so that he desists from 490 all work. A n d thou must gaze at all times at this sight of G o d ' s continual care for the work of His hands : the mind absorbed in ecstasy, the senses at rest, weak man prostrated on his face in prayer, [in astate] in which no tongue can speak and in which no heart can pray, but by astonishment at these things even prayer is cut off. This is the idleness which is more profitable than work, when a man is purely at rest, with his senses and his impulses, being continually prostrated before his Lord. A n d even his bones in silence send up a glorification to God, in this socalled idleness; as the prophet says : All my bones shall say :
ON T H E
INFLUENCES
PROCEEDING
FROM
GRACE
329
Lord, who is like unto T h e e ? A t this time, above all affections, thou findest the demon of haughtiness bound and thrown at the feet of the soul. By this gift, as it is said, man becomes worthy of t h e love of God and of complete humility. This first gift is tasted through solitude. A n d those who, in service and observance, have abided within absolute solitude, must necessarily know it. But when a man leaves solitude and begins to be lax, it is withdrawn from him. A n d when he enters again and cares for himself and clings diligently to the usual service, he is again supplied with it, and it shows its force to the soul. Then, when man has become wholly perfect, this force will cling to him inwardly and outwardly and 491 not one hour will he be without sighs and tears and the rest, if he does not neglect 3 ) the pure order of his service. Even now there are men who have been deemed worthy of this partly. A n d the peculiarities of the degree of perfection they recognize from that which they possess partially. For, when a man has tasted a small quantity 3) of wine from a large skin, he knows how all the rest is, even when others drink a part or all the remainder. A man who possesses [this gift] in perfection, will not soon be found, nay hardly at all. F o r this power is a gift of the observance of solitude; and because in this our enervated generation there is none who keeps perfect solitude and complete observance, we are also destitute of its gifts 4). H e who possesses these signs in writing of ink, but their practice is not found in him by experience, resembles a man who bears in his arms a cither adorned and provided with strong strings, but his fingers do not know, because they are not trained, to play thereon and to bring forth different melodies for his own delight. F o r he only possesses the cither, but not the required art. A n d he needs others to play on it before him and give him enjoyment. D o not rejoice when thou art rich in the knowledge of many things; but rejoice when that which thou knowest is found with thee practically. T h e former without the latter will retire gradually and even end in haughtiness, through idleness. W h e n thou art zealous in the latter, thou wilt necessarily be illuminated I) Ps. 3 5 , 1 0
2) i o Y S t t , meaning uncertain
3)
4) cf. Book of the Dove, Introduction, p. X V I
K'iiinM
33°
ON T H E
INFLUENCES
PROCEEDING
FROM
GRACE
by it without instruction. T h e eye of knowledge is experience; its growth is brought about by continual service. 492 This will be to thee a luminous token of the serenity of thy soul: when thou, examining thyself, findest thyself full of mercy for all mankind, and when thy heart is afflicted by pity for them and burns as with fire without personal discrimination. While by these things the image of the Father in heaven is continually seen in thee, thou canst recognize the degree of thy behaviour, not by the discrimination of the labours, but by the varying states to which thy intellect is subject. T h e body is then wont to swim in tears, as the mind gazes at spiritual things, while it is as if from the eyes there flowed brooks which moisten the cheeks, without compulsion, spontaneously. Now, I know one who even during his sleep was overwhelmed by ecstasy in G o d through the contemplation of something which he had read in the evening. O A n d while his soul was amazed at this contemplative meditation, he perceived, as it were, that he had meditated for long in the motion of sleep and examined the ecstatic vision. It was in the depth of the night, and suddenly he awoke from his sleep while his tears dropped as water and fell upon his breast; and his mouth was full of glorification and his heart meditated in contemplation for a long time, with a delight which did not come to an end. A n d through the many tears that, without measure, were shed by his eyes, and through the stupefaction of his soul by which all the members of his body were relaxed, and of his heart in which some delight 493 was astir, he was not even able to accomplish his usual nightservice, except some psalm at break of dawn, so overwhelmed was he by the many tears which as a fountain broke forth from his eyes spontaneously, and by the other spiritual things. L e t us also be zealous, my brethren. A n d before we go to sleep, let us many times meditate upon glorifications and recited psalm and passages of the holy scriptures, guarding ourselves against evil recollections and from bad thought. A n d let us provide 3) our treasury with every beautiful thing. Then sleep will overtake us while we are full of the recollection of God, while our soul is glowing with great desire for the things that 1 ) Cf. Introduction
2) Reading ^.DOKlJ instead of ^ r d D Q l
ON THE INFLUENCES PROCEEDING FROM GRACE
are
good,
through
the
grace
331
of G o d which surrounds us in
our sleep and spends upon us its gifts while we are sleeping, examining impurity,
us, and
whether
our
body
is free
from
any
kind
the impulses of our heart pure from evil.
of
And
through g r a c e it will be impossible for the sons of the prince of darkness
to
approach
us because the sword and lance of
grace surround us. But when they find us as they like to find us, when g r a c e has withdrawn from us because it disliked us and
has
removed
us from itself as corpses void of life, then
they approach us, with all their evil, and try us b y all sordid and fearful impulses, according to the desire of their evil will. A n d when such a thing happens to us in our sleep, let us understand at once and recollect and perceive, that in that night God's
inspiration
was far from us. A n d
how is it that the
494 demons h a v e not devoured us? Because the divine will in whose hand the soul of all flesh is placed, only allows [them] to approach us, that we should arouse and look at ourselves. It is not possible for them to approach us when [inspiration] is near. 0
au^a
33 2
ON TRUE KNOWLEDGE
AND
ON TEMPTATIONS
ETC.
LXXII ON T R U E K N O W L E D G E A N D ON T E M P T A T I O N S A N D T H A T IT IS B E C O M I N G T O K N O W E X A C T L Y T H A T N O T O N L Y W E A K A N D I N S I G N I F I C A N T A N D UNED U C A T E D PEOPLE BUT A L S O THOSE WHO H A V E BEEN DEEMED W O R T H Y OF T E M P O R A R Y A P A T H Y A N D H A V E R E A C H E D P E R F E C T I O N O F MIND A N D HAVE APPROACHED PARTIAL PURITY AS FAR AS T H I S IS C O M P A T I B L E W I T H M O R T A L I T Y A N D H A V E G A I N E D E X A L T A T I O N A B O V E A F F E C T I O N S — IN S O F A R A S IN T H I S W O R L D IT IS A L L O W E D B Y G O D IN C O M B I N A T I O N W I T H L I F E IN A F F E C T I B L E F L E S H — H A V E T O S T R U G G L E A N D A R E INJURED BY T H E AFFECTIONS BECAUSE OF THE BODY A N D T H A T TO THEM ALSO ARE CONTINUALLY PERMITTED [ T E M P T A T I O N S ] IN M E R C Y B E C A U S E O F T H E D A N G E R O F H A U G H T I N E S S IN S O M E D E G R E E A N D T H A T MANY TIMES T H E Y T R A N S G R E S S A N D H E A L THEMSELVES BY REPENTANCE G R A C E A C C E P T I N G THEM AGAIN That every rational nature is liable to deviation without distinction and that varying states pass through all men at all times, the discriminate is able to understand from many [symptoms]; moreover the experiences of each day are wholly sufficient to make him prudent if he is cautious and keeps to what is his domain. [They also show him] how many varying 495 states of rest and unrest work upon the mind every day, so that it suddenly passes from peace to perturbation without any reason from anywhere and falls into unspeakable danger. Even this is clearly described by the blessed Macarius, with great care and devotion, in order to remind and instinct the brethren, lest those who stand in the degree of purity give wray to despair at the time of contrary states, when there happens to them an accidental [state] like [a change in] air, provided that this is not due to neglect and relaxation, but that these circumstances contrary to the scope of their mind, happen to them while they are walking in their path.
ON TRUE KNOWLEDGE AND ON TEMPTATIONS
ETC.
333
A n d also the blessed Euagrius witnessing to this through real experience, has committed it to writing, for the sake of ampler confirmation, as it were lest any one should think that the blessed Macarius wrote this in his letter fortuitously without having examined his words carefully. T h u s then by reason of two veracious witnesses like these, the mind may accept, without doubt, its consolation at the time of need. W h a t then? Varying states happen to every man, like [changes of] the air. Understand it: to every m a n ; for nature is one. D o not think that he is speaking to insignificant men only and that the perfect should be exempt from varying states and that they stay in one class, without liability of deviation and without the impulse of the affections, as the Mesalleyane say. Therefore he says: u n t o - e v e r y man. H o w is this, o blessed man ? H e says: there are states of 49 cold, and soon after states of h e a t ; and perhaps of hail, and soon there-after of serenity. It is thus for our instruction : strife, then the help of grace. A n d sometimes the soul runs into a storm and heavy billows assail it; then there comes a different state and it is visited by g r a c e ; then joy fills the heart and peace from God and chaste, peaceful deliberations. Grace makes dawn here chaste deliberations on the bestiality and impurity of those whom it had ordered away. 6
Therefore he warns, saying that after these chaste and peaceful deliberations, accidents will befall the mind, that we should not be sorry or despair; or at the time of rest caused by grace, be puffed up, but that, at the time of joy, we should look at trouble. H e says that we should not be sorry when accidents h a p p e n ; not that we should not resist them, nor that the mind should accept them joyfully as something natural belonging to us, but that thou shouldst not despair even as the man who expected what is exalted above strife, and perfect rest without varying states and without struggles and blows, and freedom from the impulse of any adversity — the which it has not pleased our Lord God to give to our nature in this world so that we should entirely desist from labours and in consequence of this thought thou shouldst be relaxed by despondency and desist from thy courseBut know that all the .saints have to face this labour as long as we are in this world, though we have ample con497 solation for it in secret. F o r every day and at all times it is
ON TRUE
334
KNOWLEDGE
AND
ON TEMPTATIONS
ETC.
demanded of us that we g i v e proof of our love unto G o d b y the struggle against temptations. A n d therefore we should not be
s o r r y ; namely, we should not be dejected in our struggle
but thus is our way prepared. , F o r he that deviates from this method, saint,
becomes
who
with
a prey a
small
of the word
wolves'.
Admirable
is that
confirmed this section that is
loaded with significance and absolutely took doubt a w a y from the mind of the reader. , F o r he that deviates from this method, becomes a prey of the wolves'. T h i s means that he, that possesses
this intention
and
is minded to walk out of the w a y ,
wishing
to g o in loneliness a w a y that has not been trodden
by
Fathers,
the
prey
is through
of old wolves
stealthily
to
turn
who
back
this
in
danger of becoming the
are clad in lambs' clothes in order
foolish
souls
to
their evil under the
pretence of truth. T h a t at the time of j o y we should look at trouble,
means:
when
mighty
emotions
and
by
the
influence
amazement
when
spiritual
the
holy
sight, and
all
angels those
grace,
suddenly
of the intellectual vision of
what is a b o v e nature, fall on the soul; says:
of
as the holy
approach who
were
us in
Euagrius
filling
us
with
opposition to us
vanish, and there comes peace and unspeakable stupefaction ; when the
thou
holy
art in this s t a t e ; when grace envelops thee, and
angels are near and around thee and, therefore, all
those who tried thee, h a v e withdrawn from thee, then do not 498 extol
thyself
and
the undisturbable thou
art
storms
do
think
that thou hast reached now
harbour and the unchangeable air and that
altogether
and
not
exalted
a b o v e this bay and the contrary
that there is no fiend and no evil accidents.
For
there were many who h a v e thought thus and h a v e fallen into danger,
as
Euagrius
says,
namely:
the
danger
of
thinking
that thou art greater than many others, and that thou deservest
these
[spiritual
distinctions]
and that others, on account
of their insufficient k n o w l e d g e , are destitute of the l i k e ; but I possess [those distinctions] duly, and therefore I have reached perfect
chastity
and
the
degree
of spirituality,
and
definite
renovation. On
the other
the
unclear
the
winterperiod,
deliberations
hand
images which
recollect
the
impure deliberations and
which printed themselves in thy mind in
and
the
assailed
disturbancies
and
thee
before,
shortly
the
disordered during that
g l o o m y d a r k n e s s ; and how easily thou deviatedst towards the
ON TRUE KNOWLEDGE
affections was
and
hadst
troubled,
AND ON TEMPTATIONS
intercourse
with
them,
ETC.
when
335
thy
mind
without being ashamed before the divine sight
and on account of the gifts and presents thou hadst received. A n d know that all this was brought upon thee, in order to humble one
thee,
of us
by
as
thyself on
the
care of God, which provides for every
is profitable
account
to
him.
But
when
thou exaltest
of its gifts, it leaves thee, and thou wilt
wholly relapse into the practice o f those things by which thou wert tried in thy thoughts. Know, therefore, that the fact that thou art standing, is not due to thee nor to thy e x c e l l e n c e ; but that it is g r a c e which 499 bears thee on its handpalms so that thou art not moved. T h e s e things thou hast to recollect at the time o f j o y , when thy
deliberation
exalts itself, says our holy F a t h e r , and then
thou hast to weep and shed tears. A n d humble thyself at the recollection of thy transgressions committed when [temptations were] admitted to t h e e ; perhaps thou wilt be saved by acquiring but
humility expiate
even
without
humility but
sins
them. by
labours,
however,
dejected,
deliberations of humility.
Be
Humility,
expiates
on the contrary,
are
not,
many not
sins.
only
Labours
destitute
without
of
profit,
cause us many evils. T h e r e f o r e , expiate thy sins, by hu-
mility, is
through thy
as
I
humility
have said. to
As
all virtues.
salt
is to
The
force
all kinds o f meat, so of many
sins
is
able
to break this. T h e r e f o r e it is necessary for the mind to suffer continually by humiliation and by pain borne with discernment. If we
possess
service,
it
Without
it,
this, it makes us a son of G o d ; even without
allows
us to
stand
every
service
and
before every
God
rich
in
virtues.
virtue
and
all labours
are vain. T h e r e f o r e G o d demands the alteration of the mind. By the mind we
acquire
despicable.
So
improvement
this
alone
is
and by the mind we become
sufficient,
without
[any
further]
help, to stand before God and to speak in our behalf. T h a n k God without break on account of the fact that, notwithstanding
thy
so
time to time thou a
height
500 thou
then
and
to
art —
weak
and
easily deviating nature, from
art lifted up by the aid of g r a c e to such such
gifts
above
and
thy
remember
in which sphere
nature, and how when
[tempta-
tions] are admitted to thee, thou art brought low and possessest
a
brutish
mind.
And
recollect
the
wretchedness of thy
336
ON TRUE K N O W L E D G E
AND
ON TEMPTATIONS
ETC.
nature and how easily thou becomest subject to v a r y i n g states, as
also
one
assailed
by
of the saintly Fathers has said : W h e n thou art the
deliberation
of haughtiness
which desires to
enumerate thy virtues, then say : Father, look at thy fornication. H e means the fornication by which the deliberations are tried at the time of the admittance [of temptations] and with which man
is provided
by
grace,
be it as a means of strife or as
a means of help, according to the degree in which grace helps us. Seest thou how clearly this admirable F a t h e r explains the matter?
,When
haughtiness, say:
thou
art
because
Father,
approached
of the
by
the
deliberation
of
elevation of thy behaviour, then
look at thy fornication!' It is manifest that this
F a t h e r was speaking to a great one, because it is impossible that
deliberations
of
haughtiness
should
assail
other
people
than those who occupy a high degree and are behaving in a praiseworthy virtue
way.
has been
For
this
exercised,
affection
attacks
the
soul
when
in order to b e r e a v e it of its per-
formance. Also
from one of the letters of Macarius thou canst learn,
if thou desirest, which d e g r e e s those saints occupy unto whom temptations are admitted. T h a t letter was written by Macarius to
all
his
beloved
sons,
showing
clearly
how struggles and
the help of grace are provided by G o d , through which it has pleased S°i this
His wisdom
life,
He
to
struggling
train them as long as they abide in
against
sin, in behalf of excellence. T h i s
does in order that at all times their looks may be
fixed
upon Flim and that, by continually l o o k i n g at Him, His holy love
may
be
continually tions
augmented
refuge
and
with
in
Him
them.
S o that, when they seek
against the ardour of the affec-
the fear of deviations, they are confirmed in faith,
hope and love. So
these
things
are not said to those who continually are
in contact with men and wander about everywhere, participating in impure actions and passions [and living] in a state of relaxation. N o r are they said to those w h o perform righteousness
in works
which
who
at
moment
at
all
every
have
nothing
to
do with solitude and
are captured by the senses, and w h o
times are in danger of falling on account of the com-
pulsion
exercised
on
them
by
the
things
which
happen
to
them involuntarily, through circumstances which they have not foreseen,
so
that
they
are
unable
to guard
completely
not
ON T R U E
KNOWLEDGE
AND
AN
TEMPTATIONS
ËTC.
337
only their deliberation but even their senses. But they are destined for those who by the great watchfulness with which they guard their bodies and their deliberations, keep altogether aloof from the perturbations and conversations of men, and who by having given up all, even their soul, are able to guard their mind in prayer and to receive various provisions from grace, in perfect solitude. And under the arm of the knowledge of the Lord they are brought up and secretly made wise by the spirit, while they have rest from works and the sight of things and possess a mind dead to the world. T h e affections do not die ; but intercourse [with them] dies, because they keep aloof from things and because they are helped by grace. LXXIII 502 T H E C O N C I S E SENSE O F T H E [FOREGOING] S E C T I O N TOGETHER WITH EXPLANATIONS OF W H A T H A S BEEN SAID The concise sense of the foregoing section is to communicate to us that at every moment 1 ) of the four and twenty hours of the day, we are in want of repentance. T h e explanation of the denotation of repentance, in its real practical sense, is continual mournful supplication in contrite prayer, offered to God for the forgiveness of previous sins; and petition to be guarded against future ones 3 ). Therefore our Lord also has sustained our weakness by prayer : Watch and pray, that ye enter not into temptation 3 ). And : Pray, and do not faint 4 ). A n d : Watch ye therefore, and pray always 6 ). Ask, and it shall be given unto you ; seek, and ye shall find; knock, and it shall be opened unto you; for every one that asketh receiveth ; and he that seeketh findeth ; and to him that knocketh it shall be opened 6 ). And he corroborates His word strongly and exhortâtes us strongly by the parable of the friend who went to his friend in the middle of the night and asked him for bread. ,Verily, I say unto you, though ho will not rise and give him, because he is friend, yet bei ) Introduction 3) Matthew 2 6 , 4 1 5) Luke 2 1 , 36
2) Cf. Book of the Dove, p. 6 and note 3 4) Cf. Luke 18, 1 6) Matthew 7, 7 sq.
Verh. A f d . L e t t e r k . 1922 (Wensinck).
22
338
THE
CONCISE
SENSE
OF
THE
[FOREGOING]
ETC.
cause of his importunity he will rise and give him as m a n y as he needeth 1 ). A n d ye also: Pray and do not faint 2 ). Blessed is the unspeakable encouragement of the Giver, who exhorts us saying: Ask from me and I will give you gifts. 5°3 A n d H e will also provide you with all that is profitable, according to His knowledge. T h e s e words are full of encourag e m e n t and great confidence. A n d as our Lord knows that H e does not t a k e away liability of deviation before the cup of death [is drunk], and, this being so, that man is near to a change from excellency to deterioration, and nature susceptible of accidents — therefore H e urges us to continual beseechings. F o r if there were in this world a place of security whereto a man could go and thenceforth his nature would be exempt from need and his service from fear — then H e would not have exhorted us towards prayer nor would H e have urged us diligently. In the world to be men will not offer prayers unto God, with beseechings concerning various things. For in that place of freedom our nature will no longer be susceptible of variation, nor bound by the fear of opposition, but perfect in every way. Therefore His care not only drives us unto prayer and watchfulness, but even scourges us with the whip of temptations, in view of the subtlety and incomprehensibility of those things which continually happen to us and superate the power of our knowledge, things among which we are found continually and involuntarily. And even although our mind be firm and willed to the good, yet often His care scourges us with temptations, as the blessed Paul says: Lest I should be exalted through the abondance of the revelations, there was given me a thorn 5°4 in the flesh, the messenger of Satan to buffet me. F o r this thing I besought the Lord thrice that H e might take from me temptation (namely that I might in freedom perform the work which He had ordered me). A n d H e said unto m e : My grace is sufficient for thee : for my strength is made perfect in weakness 3 ). Therefore 4 ), my Lord, if this is thy will, and our childish nature so much needs a master who rules and exhorts that even a man who is so fond of thy love as I am and so zeai ) Luke 1 1 , 8 2) Luke i S , I 3) 2 Corinthians 1 2 , 7 sqq. 4) The following passage is put into the mouth of Paul.
T H E CONCISE SENSE OF T H E
[FOREGOING] ETC.
339
lous a follower of good that he does not see the world at all because of his drunkenness in thee, so that thou hast brought me so far as to see revelations and visions which a fleshly tongue is not allowed to interpret, and to hear the sound of the service of the spiritual orders, so that I am deemed worthy of sight full of spiritual sanctities, that such a man as- I with all this is not able to guard his own person, I who am a man perfect in Christ, — because there is still something which because of its subtleness resists the power of my knowledge — I that possess the mind of Christ — [if all this be so] then, my Lord, I rejoice at my illnesses, at troubles, reclusions, bonds, compulsions, on the part of nature or on the part of natural beings, or on the part of the fiend of nature. Joyfully, therefore, I will bear my illnesses, namely my temptations, which the power of Christ brings upon me. If, with all these, I still require the rod of temptations in order 505 to augment thy influence upon me and that I may be guarded by thy presence, I known that there is none whom thou lovest better than me. A n d because thou hast made me greater than many others and hast not given to any of my fellow Apostles what thou hast given to me — namely to know the glorifications of thy powers; and because thou hast called me an elect vessel and hast entrusted me with the guardianship of thy l o v e ; because of all these and that I know that the preaching of thy gospel has made excellent progress, while I am free from the bonds of temptations on account of all these things I know that thou wouldst have given men freedom, if this were profitable to me. But thou hast not wished that I should be without trouble and without care in this w o r l d ; and thou werst not anxious to promote the preaching of thy gospel to the same degree as thou werst anxious that I should profit by my temptations, and my soul be kept healthy with thee. Therefore, o thou who art discriminating, if the gift of the temptations be so great that a man, even if he be as exalted and advanced in spiritual state as Paul's degree w a s , still requires fear and watchfulness and gathers profit by meeting temptations, who then can reach a place of security in the world of mortality full of robbers, and receive stability l ) (which 1) re&cuA^^'SJ
34-0
T H E CONCISE SENSE OF T H E
[FOREGOING]
ETC.
was not given to the holy angels, lest they should become perfect before us), thus receiving before all people, — spiritual and bodily ones — such a gift that, according to his wish, he should be without varying states at all, without a temptation even approaching to his deliberations ? T h e order of this world, according to the conception of all 506 holy writings, is this, that even if we received a thousand blows every day, our mind would not become humble and we would desist from the course in the a r e n a ; but that on account of one small cause, we gain the victory possibly and win our crown. This world is an arena and a running place. A n d this time is a time of struggle. A n d the time and the place of the struggle are not subject to a law. This means: the K i n g does not set a terminus to his warriors, till the struggle is ended and all the world is gathered within the gate of the king of kings and it is examined there who has been constant in the war and has not been defeated, and who has taken to flight. How often will it happen that a man who was good for nothing and constantly beaten and thrown down because of his want of training, and who was always in a state of weakness, will snatch the banner from the hand of the valiant warriors and make his name famous above that of the doughty ones, the able and knowing battle-troops, and receive the crown and gifts which are honoured by all his fellows. Nobody, therefore, should give way to despondency. O n l y : he should not despise prayer, nor neglect to ask help from our Lord. A n d let us take this to heart, that, as long as we are in this world and dwelling in this body, even if we are lifted up unto the vault of heaven, it is not possible to be free from toil and injury and care. This is the sum of it all. Pardon me. What exceeds this is superfluous.
ON THE DISCRIMINATION OF VIRTUES ETC.
341
LXXIV 507 ON T H E D I S C R I M I N A T I O N O F V I R T U E S A N D T H E SCOPE OF T H E WHOLE COURSE AND T H E GREATNESS OF T H E LOVE UNTO MANKIND AND T H E S P I R I T U A L A I M W H I C H I T R E A C H E S IN A L L T H E SAINTS CREATING WITHIN T H E M A DIVINE LIKENESS BY T H E RICH L O V E WHICH HE POURS OUT UPON M A N K I N D The scope of the whole course consists in these three: Repentance, purity and perfection. What is repentance? T o desist from former [sins] and to suffer on account of them. And what is the sum of purity? A heart full of mercy unto the whole created nature. And what is perfection ? Depth of humility, namely giving up all visible and invisible things. Visible things : all that which is sensible. In visible things : all thinking about them. Another time the same Father was asked: What is repentance? He answered: A broken heart, x^nd what is humility? He replied: Embracing" a voluntary mortification regarding ail things. And what is a merciful heart ? He replied: The burning of the heart unto the whole creation, man, fowls and beasts, demons and whatever exists; so that by the recollection and the sight of them the eyes shed tears on account of the force of mercy which moves the heart by great compassion. Then the heart becomes w e a k a n d it is not able to bear hearing or examining injury or any insignificant suffering of anything in the creation. And therefore even in behalf of the irrational beings and the enemies of truth and even in behalf of those who do harm to it, at all times he 508 offers prayers with tears that they may be guarded and strengthened ; even in behalf of the kinds of reptiles, on account of his great compassion which is poured out in his heart without measure, after the example of God. And what is prayer? He replied: The mind's being free from all that is earthly and the heart's turning its gaze completely towards the desire of future hope. Who deviates from this, is as one who sews in his furrow mixed seed and as one who ploughs with ox and ass together. l) litt.: small
342
ON
THE
DISCRIMINATION
OF
VIRTUES
ETC.
How is humility acquired? H e replied: B y constant recollection of trespasses, by expectation of near death, by dressing meanly, by always choosing the lowest place and by always undertaking low and humble work, without compulsion, by constant silence, by disliking crowded meetings, by being unknown and disregarded, by choosing distincly one occupation, by hating intercourse with other persons, by disliking' profits. All his qualities are based upon these. A n d his mind must be exalted above vituperating and reproaching anyone and above zealotism. A n d his hand shall not be against all. Nor the hand of all with him. But he shall be a solitary, only occupying himself with his own things, and lonely. A n d he shall not take upon himself the care of any one in the world except himself. In short: abiding abroad and poverty and lonely dwelling give birth to humility and purify the heart. A s to those who have reached perfection, their token is, that if ten times every day they are delivered to burning for the sake of the love of mankind, they are not 509 saturated with it. A s also Moses said to God : If thou wilt not pardon the children of Israel, blot me out of thy book which thou hast w r i t t e n A n d as also the blessed Paul s a i d 3 ) : I could desire to be removed afar from Christ 3 ), if thereby the children of Israel would come near to the faith of life. A n d if it be thus that it is possible that they, for this reason, will believe in Christ and will come to life everlasting and will not be alienated from the living God. Then, as is written : I rejoice in my sufferings for you, o peoples 3). E v e n so the other Apostles have undergone all kinds of death, for the sake of the love of the life of mankind. T h e sum of all is God, the Lord of all, who from love of His creatures, has delivered His son to death on the cross. F o r God so loved the world, that He g a v e his only begotten son for it 4 ). Not that He was not able to save us in another way, but in this way it was possible to show us His abundant love abundantly, namely by bringing us near to Him by the death of His son. If H e had anything more dear to Him, He would have given it us, in order that by it our race might be His. A n d out of His great love H e did not even choose to urge our freedom by compulsion, though He was able to do so. But His aim was, that 1 ) Cf. Exodus 32, 32 2) The text has some words which give no sense here and are wanting in the Greek translation. 3) Cf. Col. 1 , 2 4 4) Cf. John 3, 16
ON THE DISCRIMINATION
OF VIRTUES ETC.
343
we
should come near to Him by the love of our mind. A n d our Lord obeyed His father out of love unto us, taking upon Him scorn and suffering joyfully, as Scripture s a y s : 510 W h o for the j o y that was set before him endured the cross, despising the shame 1 ). Therefore our L o r d said in the night in which H e was betrayed: This is my body which is given for the salvation of the world unto life. A n d this is my blood which is shed for all for the remission of sins 2). In behalf of them I offer myself. A n d so all the saints have reached this accomplishment when they became perfect, so that they resembled G o d in effusion of love and compassion for mankind. And they asked for themselves as a token of their r e s e m b l i n go- God," that thev• should be perfect in the love of their fellows. So did also the solitary Fathers, that they might bear in themselves constantly this likeness full of the life of Christ, the Lord of the Universe. T h e blessed Antonius thought that he never could do anything so useful to himself as that which was profitable to his neighbour, in the opinion that the profit of his neighbour was his excellent service. Analogous is a saying concerning the blessed A g a t h o n : ,1 wished that I could find a leper, and give him my body and take his'. Doest thou see the perfect love? E v e n in outward things he could not bear to displease his neighbour rather than himself. H e possessed namely a knife, which a brother saw and liked it. A n d he did not allow him 511 to leave his cell till he had taken it. A n d when he possessed a thing and saw some one who wanted it, he did not lay any further claim to it. What do I mean by these things [which include] that many of them have given their bodies even to the beasts and the sword and the fire on behalf of their neighbours ? It is not possible that a man should reach this degree of love, with the exception of that one who secretly perceives his faith. A n d it is not possible that those who love this world, should acquire the love of mankind. When a man has acquired love, he is clad with God at the same time. He that has put on God, never can be persuaded to acquire any other thing except Him, but he puts off his body even. A n d if he is clad with the world or with love of his life, these will not allow i) Hebr. 12, 2
2) Cf. Matth. 26,26,28
344
ON T H E
DISCRIMINATION
OF V I R T U E S
ETC.
him to put on God. For he is witness: he that does not forsake and hate all, even himself, cannot be my disciple 1 ). Not only that he should leave them, but that he should ever hate them. And if he cannot be a disciple, how can He dwell in him? T h e i n t e r r o g a t o r . How is it that the service of hope is so delightful, and its labours so few and its work so easy to the soul? T h e F a t h e r . This is because it excites the natural longing in the soul and gives them this cup to drink and makes them drunk. And from this moment they nevermore perceive fatigue but become apathetic against troubles. And during the whole of their course it is to them as if they were moving in the 512 air without bodily motion, without seeing anything of the difficulty of the road or the streams and hills that are before them; but the crooked becomes to them straight and rough places plain 3 ), because they always see the bosom of their Father; and all those things which are far and invisible it makes to them clear in themselves, so that they gaze at them mysteriously with the hidden eye of faith. For all the parts of the soul become hot as by fire, on account of the expectation of those things which, though far, become as near; for towards them is tended the whole direction of their deliberations; and they hasten to know when they will reach [their aim] and when they will approach unto every single virtue by practice. They do not practice them partly, but all of them together, at the same time. For they do not take their course along the king's way, as the generality of men, but choose short paths along which a few heroes move, who easily reach the Apartment. For hope warms them as with fire, and they cannot pause in their incessant course, on account of their joy. And to them happens as in the word of Jeremia : I said: I will not make mention of him, nor speak any more in his name. But his word was in mine heart as a burning fire shut up in my bones 3 ). Such is the recollection of God in the heart of those who move in the expectation of the promise. Short 513 paths I call the concise virtues, because in them there is no winding nor the long space of many ways of discipline leading from here to there, nor place nor time nor distraction. But they stand on the way and accomplish it at once. 1) Cf. Luke 14, 33
2) Isaia 40, 4
3) Jeremia 20, 9
ON THE DISCRIMINATION OF VIRTUES ETC.
345
T h e i n t e r r o g a t o r . W a t is apathy? T h e F a t h e r a n s w e r s . A p a t h y is not [the state] that does not perceive the affections, but that which does not accept them, so that on account of the many virtues possessed, manifest and hidden ones, the affections have become weak and cannot easily assail the soul. Neither does the spirit want to look at them every time, because at all times its emotion is filled with meditation and intercourse with excellent thoughts, which move with insight in the mind. A n d when an affection is beginning to move, the spirit at once hastens away from it through some insight which it perceives in the mind, and the affection remains idle. A s also the blessed Euagrius s a y s : the mind which by the grace of G o d performs works of excellence and approaches unto knowledge, perceives little of the foolish part of the soul. F o r its knowledge drags it on high and alienates it to all things in the world; this happens also because, on account of their purity, their mind has become subtle and light and swift. Forther the mind is purified by asceticism, because the body is desiccated, and also in consequence of the fulness of solitude and the long space of time passed in it. Therefore it swiftly alights on several things towards which 514 their contemplation draws them in ecstasy. Therefore they are rich in contemplation, and are never in want of abundant insight in their spirit, apart from the fact, that the Spirit ripens its fruits in them. A n d in the course of time also the eye loses sight of the recollections that come from the heart and which stir the affections in the soul and are a principal power of Satan. But when the soul does not associate with the affections by meditating upon them — because it is continually occupied by other care — the power of their nails cannot take hold of the soul's spiritual senses. T h e i n t e r r o g a t o r : What are the characteristics of humility ? T h e F a t h e r a n s w e r s : A s presumption dissipates the soul by phantastic distraction on account of the power inciting it to fly round the whole creation in the cloud of its deliberations, so humility is the power which concentrates the soul's being by the peace of its deliberations and the reclusion of the soul within its self. A n d as the soul is unknown and invisible to the fleshly eye, so the humble is unknown amongst mankind. A n d as the soul in the body is hidden from sight and from mingling with every man, so the truly humble not
346
ON THE DISCRIMINATION OF VIRTUES ETC.
only does not desire to be seen and known a m o n g mankind, because of his being hidden and recluded from all, but it is even his desire — if possible — to be shut off from his soul and to be within himself in total quiet and rest of his emotions and senses, as something that does, not exist in the 515 creation and has not come into existence and is not at all, so that he does not even wish for himself to be known and perceived. A n d as long as he is hidden and shut off from the world, he is wholly with his Lord. T h e humble is never pleased to see crowds and gatherings of people, noise and rumour, nor riches and finery, nor the luxury which is a consequence of them, nor speech and intercourse, rumour and distraction of the senses. But above all he chooses concentration and reclusion with himself alone, to be quiet and shut off and lonely and left to himself in a solitary place void of all beings and separated from the whole creation. A n d in every respect smallness and limitation and want and poverty is beloved by him. And he is not occupied with many things and labours, but at all times he is satisfied and without care, without troublesome mingling with worldly things, so that his deliberations do not wander from his self, because he knows that if he alights upon many things it is not possible for him to remain without confused emotions. F o r many practices cause many cares. A n d many cares are a gathering-point of varied thoughts and deliberations. T h e n he would h a v e to give up his being exalted above the care of earthly things, in peace of deliberations — except for the small necessary things which are inevitable — with a spirit occupied with a single care, the emotions being in a state of peace. A n d then necessary things would not allow him to keep silent 516 and so he would be injured and would cause injury. T h u s there would be opened a g a t e for the affections and discriminating quiet would disappear, humility would flee, the gate .of salvation would be shut. A n d because of all this, he continually keeps his soul away from the many things, and at all times thou findest him quiet and at rest and humble and peaceful. In the humble there is never violence nor terror nor confusion, nor hot nor quick emotions. But at all times he abides in rest. If heaven should fall on the earth, the humble would not be moved. Not every one who is quiet, is humble. But every one who
ON T H E
DISCRIMINATION
OF V I R T U E S
ETC.
347
is humble is also quiet. T h e r e does not exist one who is humble without being submissive. Those who are submissive without being humble are found in large numbers. This is the meek and humble concerning whom our Lord has said: Learn of me, that I am meak and lowly in heart; and ye shall find rest unto your s o u l s T h e humble is content at all times, because there is nothing which moves his spirit. A s it is not possible for a man to move a mountain, so the spirit of the humble is unmoved, if it is possible to say so. A n d perhaps it is not even foolish to say that even the humble does not belong to this world, because he is not destroyed nor moved by distresses: even [emotions] of joy cause ecstasy and effusion to him. But all his joy and true excultation is in the things of his Lord. Connected with humility are patience, a concentrated self 517 — which is [real] humility —• a low voice, little speech, selfcontempt, mean clothes, a modest gait, bashful looks, effusion of mercy, easily flowing tears, a lonely soul, a broken heart, the not being moved by anger, absence of distraction of the senses, moderate wishes, moderate wants in every respect, willingness to bear, patience, intrepidity, manliness of heart born from hatred of temporal life, endurance of temptations, few emotions which are not swift, extinguished deliberations, keeping of secrets, chastity, bashfulness, modesty, and above all: continual silence, continual having recourse to ignorance. T h e humble is never approached by necessity which makes him confused. T h e humble, even when he is alone, is shameful for his soul. I wonder whether there exists a truly humble man, who ventures to pray to God when he approaches unto prayer, or who is worthy of this, or of asking Him anything, or who knows what he shall pray. But when all his emotions are quiet and he only hopes for mercy, [being uncertain] which order will be given concerning himself by the adorable Majesty; when his face is bent towards the earth and the inner gaze of the heart lifted up towards the door of the holy of holies of the Highest, the cloud of whose dwelling-place blinds the eyes of the Seraphs, and whose splendour terrifies the legions of their orders, when silence lies upon all their classes and 1 ) Matthew 1 1 , 2 9
348
ON T H E DISCRIMINATION
OF V I R T U E S
ETC.
518 they expect the rising of mysteries from the domain of invisible things, in an airless womb, with emotions without voice, with unbodily senses, with apperception without resemblance 1 ), without seeing the revelations which reach them, the vehemence of their emotions being too weak to endure the waves of His mysteries; then he does not venture to say anything, but: According to thy will, my Lord. These things so far I have endeavoured to write to thee in plain words, which the spirit could attain without scrutiny on account of their manifest sense; things by the reading of which alone the mind forgets the ways and the dealings of this world and its fleshly life, migrating then with the spirit unto its true and profitable world. [I have written this], asking thy love that, when thou comest in contact with these mysteries, thon shalt not leave them without profit, so that they should be found with thee to be dead sentences; lest it should happen to thee as it happened to those who were invited to the spiritual meal but excused themselves. Behold, the table is prepared, spiritual ideas are ranged upon it, and all delightful things are r e a d y ; and the bridegroom expects that we shall enter and rejoice with him. L e t us, therefore, not excuse ourselves, lest there be said to us also the word that was said concerning them. What then? Verily, I say unto you, that none of those invited, shall eat from my meal.
LXXV ON H I D D E N S T A T E S A N D T H E P O W E R S A N D I N F L U E N C E S W H I C H A R E IN T H E M This may be taken for true by thee, that the practice of marvellous things, and the foreseeing of future things, and temptations, and rest from strife, and victory over every one of the affections, and the presence of every one of the vritues, and consolation, for a certain time, from grace, and purity of prayer, and warmth of spirit, and spiritual j o y , and all the other things with which a man fatigues himself for a certain time,7 with a good intention and a mournful heart — that in o 1) The: in the text to be placed after KlOOOK'.T
ON HIDDEN STATES AND THE POWERS AND
ETC.
349
all these G o d will condescend to accomplish man's will at any time. A n d when H e sees his intention and longing H e grants him his wish and satisfies him. A s to the mysteries which belong to the spirit, namely the emotions during spiritual prayer, and the entering of the mind behind the curtain of the holy of holies, and the apperception of the indestructible inheritance — if a man does not pay their duty, G o d is not willing to grant them, even if the whole creation should beseech in behalf of him. Their duty is purity of the soul. When a man has reached purity from the affections, what no eye has seen and no ear has heard and what has not entered into the heart of man to ask in prayer, is revealed to him by purity, which during no moment ceases from mysteries and spiritual visions. A n d what the force of 520 spring is wont to work unto the nature of the earth, this grace works unto the soul by purity. T h e power of spring makes even the smallest roots in the valleys bud, warming the earth as fire does the cauldron, so that it sends forth the treasures of the plants which God has laid in the earth's nature, to the gladness of the creation and to His glory. So grace makes manifest all the glory which G o d has hidden in the nature of the soul showing the soul this glory and making it glad because of its own beauty. So that when it sees the great and unspeakable treasures which G o d has laid in it and which were hidden from it by the defiled mantle of affections and ignorance, but which now that it has torn asunder the garment of the affections, H e has shown to it — it is captured on account of its gladness by His love and turns its back on earthly things. Moreover it does not remember the body which hid its own beauties from its sight. Then it sees heavenly beauties in itself as the exact mirror which by its great purity shows the beauty of faces. Holiness suits those who are holy. A l l excellence whatever and all service by which righteousness is accomplished, may be performed ^and acquired and accomplished without solitude ; but apathy and purity cannot be acquired without solitude.
35°
SHORT
SAYINGS
LXXVI 521
SHORT
SAYINGS
T h e blessed Paul teaches us saying: Put off the old man and put on the new man, which after God is created in righteousness and holiness -1). H e does not s a v : Put on the new man over the old man. F o r he knows that this is not possible. L o o k , how wisely he gives his order. H e does not say : Put on the new man who is renewed by the knowledge of God, but he says, first put off this, and then put on the new. Also he says definitely in another place: Flesh and blood cannot inherit the kingdom of God, neither does corruption inherit incorruption 2). By incorruption he means the knowledge of the other world. B y corruption and flesh and blood he designates the corruptible affections of soul and body, which have the place of their motion in the fleshly mind. Purity he calls the new man, and by the kingdom of God he means the exalted and intelligible contemplation of the blessed motions of the essential rays into which the saintly soul only is allowed to enter when its incorruptible emotions are lifted up above corruption and flesh and blood. I f 3 ) the apple of thy soul's eye has not been purified, do not venture to look at the sun, lest thou be bereaved of thy usual visual power and thou be thrown into one of those intel522 ligible places which are Tartarus and a type of Hell, namely darkness without God, whither those who with the impulses of their mind leave nature, wander by the cognitive nature which they possess. Therefore he that ventured to go to the banquet in sordid garments, was ordered to be thrown out into that outer darkness. By the banquet is designated the sight of spiritual knowledge. T h e institutions in it are the manifold divine mysteries, full of j o y and exultation and delight of the soul. T h e garment of the banquet he calls the mantle of purity; the sordid garments the emotions of the affections in the soul which are defiled, the outer darkness, the state with1 ) Cf. Ephes. 4 , 2 2 , 2 4 2) I Cor. 1 5 , 5 0 3) The following passage occurs also p. 16 sq. Cf. the Introduction.
SHORT
SAYINGS
351
out any delight of true k n o w l e d g e and communion with G o d . He
that
is clad
phantastically introduce plations
with
such
garments
and
ventures to think
with his intellect on the heights of G o d and to
and
to
settle
of that holy
his soul within
the spiritual contem-
banquet which is made to dawn in the
pure only, and who, p a r t a k i n g only of the delight of the affections, wishes to mingle suddenly expelled Hell
in the
overwhelmed, thence
delight of that banquet —
is
as it were by some hallucination, and
unto the place
without rays, which is called
and destruction, which is ignorance and oblivion of G o d .
F o r it has been said that the things of G o d come of their own, if there is a pure and undefiled place. T h a t they come of their
own,
heavenly
means
that
shines
in it, without investigation and labour
light
it naturally belongs to purity that
523 on our part. F o r in the pure heart, the new heaven is s t a m p e d ; of which the sight is light and the room is spiritual.
A s also
in another place it is said : A s the magnet-stone has the natural faculty to attract
atoms
of iron, so has spiritual
knowledge
[the faculty to attract] the pure heart. Though that
no
it has been handed down rightly by the true ones
mind is absolutely
steadfast
against the allurements
of the affections in this life, yet 1 say with confidence without being
afraid
of the
truth of experience, that he who is clad
with the garment of mourning in his mind, is not only invincible against o
the allurements
of the
effections,' but
a hero in the
war against them and a victor, because they absolutely do not venture to show themselves with the intention of strife, nor do they
even
venture
to
appear
from
afar
where
there
is a
mourning soul which has made itself a wailing-place with various lamentations the
blessed
meets
the
on
account
Jacob: beloved
It
of its sins.
makes
Joseph.
A s it has been said by
its abode
Where
there
in the g r a v e , till it is the bitterness of
mourning, I do not believe that the above-mentioned pleasure of the affections is admitted. But I say that in watchfulness lies this service and confidence, exalted a b o v e fear. H e that is constantly in a state of mourning because of his fear —
as he does not know what the end of
his course will be —
is more
excellent than he that is con-
524 stantly in the way of gladness, because he perceives the hope of his service. O thou w h o s e town is vanquished by inward affections, put
352
SHORT
SAYINGS
on the armour of mourning and persecute them and save thy soul from their hands. For always invincible is this weapon and that of confidence, and tried by the true ones.
LXXVII T H I S C H A P T E R IS F U L L O F L I F E O thou wretched man, wishest thou to find life? T a k e faith and humility in order to find by them mercy and help and consolation from G o d , and protection secretly and openly. Desirest thou to acquire these, which are the fountain of life? Put on sincerity, from the beginning. In sincerity walk before God, and not in knowledge. Sincerity is combined with faith; subtlety and the reflections of knowledge, with presumptuous thoughts ; presumptuous thoughts, with being removed from God. When thou liest before God in prayer, then be in thy consideration as a an ant and as the reptiles of the earth and as the beetle. And stammer as a villager and speak not before Him with knowledge. With a childlike mind approach unto God and walk before Him, that thou mayest be worthy of the paternal care which fathers entertain in behalf of their young children. 2 55 It has been said: The Lord guards the children. A child may approach a serpent and take it at its neck; and the animal will not bite. A child may go naked during the whole winter. And while others are clad and covered — yet the cold penetrates all their members — he sits down naked in the day of frost and ice, without suffering, because the body of their childhood is covered by a different, invisible garment, by that hidden care which guards the frail members of childhood, lest injury from any side approach them. Doest thou now believe that there is a secret care in behalf of the tender body which is expecially liable to all kinds of injuries on account of its tenderness and the weakness of its joints, so that it is guarded from obnoxious influences so that they do not cause suffering? For the Lord guards the child. Thou must not only apply this and believe it in the case of children, but also in the case of those who, being wise in the world, leave their knowledge, and relying upon that wisdom which is
THIS CHAPTER IS FULL OF LIFE
353
all-sufficient become children by their own will. T h e n they learn wisdom, which is not to be learnt by labours of exercise. Also
the
blessed
Apostle,
who
was wise in divine things,
has beautifully said in an admonition: If any man seemeth to be wise in this world, let him become a fool, that he may be wise the
But
beseech
degree
God,
that
H e may grant thee to reach
of faith. If thou perceivest the delight of faith in
thy soul, it is not difficult for me to say that there is nothing further 5
26
which
withholds it from Christ. A n d it is not difficult
for it to be
always
captivated
and
not
to perceive earthly
things but
to forget
this w e a k world and the recollection of
its things.
O n behalf of this pray without dejection ; and ask
it with tears and beseech f e r v e n t l y ; and supplicate with great earnestness,
till thou hast received it. Further no fatigue will
be necessary. Thou
wilt
be
deemed
worthy
of this,
if beforehand thou
compellest thy soul to cast thy care on G o d , in faith, and so thou wilt c h a n g e thy care for His care. T h e n , when H e sees that in utter serenity of spirit thou art willed to believe in things
which
concern
thee
and
that
thou
God
compellest thy
soul to confide in G o d more than in thyself, that power with which thou art not acquainted, will take hold of thee, so that thou wilt be
affected in an apperceptible way b y the power
which works in thee, no room being left for doubt. By
this power
which
they
perceived,
many went into the
fire without fear, and walked on water without thinking of the possibility
that
they
could
be
drowned
in it,
because
faith
strengthened the senses of their soul so that it felt an inward conviction that resolution could not be w e a k e n e d nor look on terrible things except with a g a z e exalted b o v e the senses. T a k e care not to think at all, that spiritual k n o w l e d g e can be received by psychic k n o w l e d g e . It is not only that spiritual knowledge
cannot
be
received
is even
impossible
that
those
training
in psychic
knowledge
by who
psychic k n o w l e d g e , but it zealously
should
be
try to
deemed
acquire
worthy to
527 perceive spiritual knowledge. A n d if any of them should desire to
approach
unto spiritual
knowledge,
before h a v i n g
denied
psychic k n o w l e d g e and all its subtle orders and intricacies and before h a v i n g
1) I
reached
childhood
of spirit —
it will not
Cor. 3, 18 V e r h . A f d . L e t t e r k . 1922 ( W e n s i n c k ) .
23
be
THIS
354 possible
for
him
CHAPTER
to
ÌS
approach
FULL
OF
even
a
LÌFÈ
little way
towards it.
But its customs and perverted impulses become to him many hindrances, before he gradually forgets them. Spiritual
knowledge
deliberations. deliberations
is
Before the and
simple, mind
not
illuminated
by
psychic
has been freed from manifold
has reached the unified simplicity of purity,
it is not able to perceive spiritual things. This
order of k n o w l e d g e , consisting therein that man here
already
perceives the
delight
of the life of the world to be,
rejects much deliberation. A n d psychic k n o w l e d g e is not able, apart
from
the
gatherings
of
many
deliberations,
to
know
anything which is received by serenity of spirit. A n d the word of our come of
Lord
is not denied: E x c e p t ye be converted and be-
as little children, y e
heaven1).
innocence; is k e p t
Indeed,
but
shall not enter into the kingdom
many
those who do not reach this
are
on account of their beautiful w o r k s a portion
for them
with
our
L o r d in the kingdom of heaven,
as can be recognized from the understanding of the blessings which H e especially pronounced in His gospel. In these blessings
He
has touched
which it appears]
that
a variety
of ways of behaviour [from
for every man who walks to Him, in
w h a t e v e r measure on w h a t e v e r way, the g a t e of the kingdom of heaven
is open.
But
the
word
'Except
ye be converted
528 and become as little children' means that here man the delight o to
be
of the
spiritual
labours
of the
kingdom. o
contemplation. deliberations,
perceives
T h e kingdom of heaven is said £> And but
this
is not found by the
it is tasted by grace.
And
before a man has become pure, he is not able even to hear. Because it is not acquired by learning. If thou reachest purity, my son, which is acquired through the faith of the heart and by
reclusion from men, and thou forgettest the k n o w l e d g e
of
this world and doest not perceive it, then [spiritual contemplation] suddenly is found within thee, without inquiring after it. Erect
a
pillar and pour oil upon it 3 ), and thou wilt find thy
treasure within thee. If,
however,
thou
art
entangled
in the
snares
of psychic
knowledge,
I have
no objection to say that it will be easier
to
escape
from
thee
to
iron bonds than from it. A n d
thou
wilt never be far from the snares of seduction, and thou wilt 1) Matth. 1 8 , 3
2)
Cf. Gen. 28, 18
THIS CHAPTER IS FULL OF" LIFE
355
never be able to find and to have freedom of speech and confidence unto our Lord. And at all times thou wilt walk on the edge of the sword and thou wilt not be able absolutely to be without suffering 1). T a k e refuge with weakness and sincereness, that thou mayest live beautifully before God, and that thou mayest be without fear. For as the shadow follows the bodies, so does mercy follow humility. Therefore, if thou wishest to be connected with these, 2 5 9 do not give room any-how to weak deliberations. If all injuries and evils and dangers surround thee and make thee fear, do not care to look at them or to think of them. If once thou believest that God is able to guard and to govern thee, and if thou followest him, then do not further care for anything like these. But say to thyself: All-sufficient is He to whom thou hast once entrusted thyself. I am not near [to anything], but He knows it. Then thou wilt see indeed the wonders of God, namely how near His salvation always is to those who fear H i m ; and that His care surrounds them, though it is invisible. And though the guardian which is with thee is invisible to the bodily eyes, yet thou shalt not doubt his existence. Sometimes he reveals himself also to the bodily eyes, for the sake of thy confirmation. But when man has thrown away all visible help and human hope and clings to God in faith and with a clear heart, then at once grace will cling to him and reveal in him its force by various [acts of] help. At first it shows its help in manifest things, also in bodily ones, by its care of him, in order that by these things he may the better be able to perceive the power which is in God's care of him, and that by insight in manifest things he may become confirmed in hidden ones, as is becoming to his childlike mind and his lack of training. How then? It is to be compared with this, for instance, that a man's want is prepared for him without labour, without his bestowing care on it. So grace causes him to escape many accidents 53° which often come near him and which are full of danger. And while he has no anxiety before them because he does not perceive them, grace disposes of them in a very wonderful way, as also the other things which suddenly assail him, without his thinking how often injury to the soul and also to the i) Affection?
356
THIS CHAPTER IS FULL OF LIFE
body may proceed from them. And it preserves him against them, as a nurse who gives him shade and spreads her wings over her sons, that no harm may approach unto them. And at the same time it causes him to perceive that which happened, showing him what threatened to destroy him, by the yees of the body, and the actual help of God, in a clearway; and the dissolution of his life which was near and from which God saved him. So [grace] instructs him, also in hidden things. And it reveals to him the ambushes of thoughts and of deliberations difficult to understand. So he will easily attain to their understanding and their mutual relation and seduction, which is related to which, and how one is born from the other and destroys the soul. And the whole ambush of the demons is laid open before him, and the cover of their deliberations, and what is related to every one of them. And [grace] provides him with insight, so that he understands what will happen. Then in his sincereness dawns a hidden light so that he perceives everything and the force of the emotions of subtle deliberations. It shows him as it were with its finger —• if he did not know this — what is going to happen to him. And then this is born in him, that he asks from his governor, in prayer, all things small and great. And when grace, by all these things, has confirmed his mind in confidence on God, then it begins to introduce him gradually into temptations. And it admits unto him those temptations the difficulty of which his degree is able to bear. And by such a temptation it adduces unto him its help in an apperceptive way, in order to strengthen his courage, till, gradually, he acquires training and wisdom and despises his enemies through confidence in God. For it is impossible for a man, without these, to become prudent in spiritual struggles and to recognize his governor and to perceive his God, and to become secretly confirmed in his hope, by the force which he has received personally through experience. And as often as [grace] sees that the deliberation of presumption begins to move somewhat in him, and that he begins to think great things of himself, it allows the temptations to become strong and powerful against him, so that he recognizes his weakness and flees and seeks refuge with God in humility. By these things man reaches the degree of perfect man, through
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IS F U L L
OF
LIFE
357
faith and hope in the son of God to whom he is lifted up in love. F o r in a wonderful manner G o d ' s help unto man is recognized when he is surrounded by circumstances full of despair, and God shows there His power by delivering him from them. N e v e r has man experienced the divine power in rest and comfort, and never has H e shown His action in an apperceptible manner except in a lonely place or in the desert or in places not visited by men and free from the disturbance of their habitation. 532
B e not astonished if, when thou beginnest [to practice] excellence," severe troubles rise agfainst these from all sides. F o r o excellence is not to be deemed to involve that its practice is not combined with difficulty and labours. Excellence has received its denomination from this, says the holy Euagrius. Usually difficulties make front against this alertness, and excellence is to be rejected when it is combined with comfort, says the blessed Marcus, the solitary. A l l excellence whatever, is called the cross, because it accomplishes the order of the spirit. F o r all those who desire in the fear of G o d to live in Jesus Christ, are assailed by troubles. If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross and follow me. W h o e v e r would save his life in comfort, loses it; and who gives up his life for my sake, finds it 1 ). Therefore our Lord has placed before thee the cross, that thou mightest pronounce death on thy soul and thereupon cause it to follow Him. There is nothing so strong as despair. It does not know how it can be defeated by anything belonging to those of the right or to those of the left hand. When a man in his mind has given up his life, none is more courageous than he is, and there is no enemy who is able to meet him, and there is no trouble the fame of which can weaken his mind. F o r any trouble whatever is inferior to death, and he has resolved to take death upon himself.
533
If in every place and in every work and at all times concerning all things which thou art going to perform thou placest labour and pain as an example for the mind, thou wilt not only be found always courageous and undaunted to thwart all reputed difficulty, and by the vigour of the deliberations to put timidity to flight which usually rises therefrom that delii ) Matth. 1 6 , 2 4
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358
IS FULL
OF
LIFE
berations look for comfort, but also all hard and difficult things which meet thee will seem to thee easy and light. H o w often thy will is thwarted by what thou expectest, though perhaps these things do not reach thee. F o r thou knowest that the
expectation
profit
and
of comfort a l w a y s withholds men from great
from
excellent g o o d , so that even those who live
in the world with their fleshly dealings cannot accomplish their wish if they
do not resolve in their mind to bear difficulties.
A n d because experience is witness to this, persuasion with words is not necessary.
And
there is nothing
which
in all
preceding generations till now
makes
men
despair
of victories and
checks them from exellent practice and which makes them to say it in one word — as the
expectation
not only
of the
despise to enter into the
—
kingdom,
small comfort which is near.
And
this, but many times this aspect is the cause of se-
vere accidents and hard temptations to every man whose mind is directed
towards
it and whose deliberations move unto it;
534 because his governor is the will of desire. W h o does not know that
also
the
bird
by
the aspect of comfort draws near the
snare? Perhaps our k n o w l e d g e , as compared to that of a bird, is much dents
inferior,
which
various
concerning
the hidden things and the acci-
are hidden in things and actions and places and
things.
And
also Satan, from the beginning, tries to
ensnare us b y promises and the prospect of comforts. N o w that my mind is occupied with the subject of desire, by the words I have written, I h a v e erred a w a y from the scope which I had indicated a b o v e , viz. that at all times we must place the aspect of troubles before our mind, in all that we wish to begin in the path of our Lord, so that it reach its end duly. H o w many times, when a man wishes to begin some work for the or
Lord, he asks whether there is comfort in the thing,
whether
it is possible
to accomplish it easily, without la-
bour, or whether there is any thing in it to trouble the body. Are
not
above
and
beneath names of comfort? W h a t doest
thou say, o man? D o e s t thou wish to ascend unto heaven and to
receive
the
K i n g d o m which is there and communion with
G o d and spiritual comforts and that blessedness and mingling with the angels, and immortal life? A n d doest thou ask whether there is trouble in this w a y ?
H o w astonishing are those
who desire the things of this world and the riches which are to be destroyed and the dominion which will be dissolved. T h e y
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359
walk on the difficult waves of the s e a ; and they tread frightful ways;
they
bear
a
long course full of labours and troubles,
535 and other mournful things which men are wont to perform for the
sake
of their
desire;
and
they
do not deliberate at all
whether there is labour in the matter or vexation in what they wish to d o ; whereas we a l w a y s inquire after comforts. If we
always
fixion
and
then
should
in our mind t a k e upon us the way of cruci-
always
comply
with the crucifixion, what difficulty
not be easier than it? D o e s there exist any one
at all who is not acquainted with this, that no man has ever won
a victory
in battle and received a perishable crown, or
has
administered
divine
actions,
or
has succeeded in any of
the glorious things of excellence, or has got the desire of his will even in things first
labours
alluring
and
mind
troubles
by
caused
zealous
smell,
what
caused
and
is
senses — know
laudable, or
without
without
having
having
undertaken
pushed
away
thoughts of comfort that g a v e birth to dejection and
pusillanimity the
not
in
touch,
it means foreign
relaxation
in all
behalf
excellence,
hearing,
of
sight
things?
and
But when
the
taste —
outward do
not
to be vanquished by the severe shocks
influences
lying
outside
the
course
and
dominion of the power of nature. When
anger
influences [a man] naturally,
then bodily life
appears more despicable than dung. W h e n however the heart is spiritually
zealous,
the
body
does
not suffer by troubles,
nor does it shrink from terrible things. But the mind faces all temptations being like diamond in its endurance. 536
L e t us also be zealous with a spiritual zeal for the sake of the will of Jesus, then all dejection which causes relaxation in the
mind
r a g e and is there
will
be driven a w a y from us. F o r zeal causes cou-
firmness
of soul and -soundness of body. W h a t powrer
in the demons when the soul moves its zeal against
them with natural vigour? Resolution too is said to be the offspring of zeal. A n d immoveable
all
v i g o u r which is born in the soul when it sets its
powers to work, is implanted in it by zeal. A l s o the crowns of confessorship which
the victorious martyrs receive on account
of their
are born by this twofold influence of zeal
endurance
and resolution which have their origin in the power of natural anger,
[and thus
the
martyrs] become
vehement suffering in vexations.
apathetic
against the
360
ON T H E PROFIT
[ARISING]
FROM
THE
FLIGHT
ETC.
LXXVIII ON T H E P R O F I T [ARISING] F R O M T H E F L I G H T F R O M T H E W O R L D T H E M E T H O D O F W H I C H HAS BEEN T H O U G H T O U T BY T H E F A T H E R S T H R O U G H PRUDENT EXAMINATION Strong indeed and difficult and very hard is the struggle which arises when things are near. And though a man may be excellent and vigorous, when things causing battles and strife are near, fear clings to him. Then he falls easier than when Satan personally meets him in battle. For when a man 537 is not far from those things which the heart is afraid of, the fiend has constantly the opportunity [to assail him]. And if it happens that he sleeps a while, the fiend can easily destroy him. For there the body is in danger of being injured, at any rate it has to be kept afar from sin. But here it is the soul that receives an invisible blow and it cannot fatigue the fiend so that he gives up fighting against it. For these things are of themselves able to move against it the disturbance of struggle at any time. And willingly it lets itself be captivated by them, without any one arousing strife against it from without. But the soul is in strife with itself through the allurements of those things which are arranged before the senses of the body, as has been said somewhere; for as soon as the soul is captivated by the injurious meetings with the world, these meetings become stumbling-blocks to it; or, as has also been said : The soul is naturally vanquished, when it meets those things. Therefore, because the ancient saints who have walked in these ways knew that the mind is not always healthy so as to be able to remain in one attitude, without deviation, and vigilant, because there is a time that the soul becomes enveloped in darkness without being able to look at those things which cause injury — they have examined prudently and [resolved to] put on renunciation, as a weapon. For it frees from many struggles, as has been written. For some have escaped from sins, through their poverty and have migrated towards the desert where there is nothing to cause affections,
ON T H E PROFIT [ARISING] FROM T H E FLIGHT ETC.
361
so that, when a time comes when they are weak, nothing is found to give occasion to fall. I say: anger and desire and rancour and glory and the like are slight, because of the desert, and by it [those solitaries] were protected as by an invincible tower. Then every one of them was able to accomplish his strife in solitude, there where the senses found no support so as to become fiends by injurious meetings. Better for us is death in our struggle, than life with falling. LXXIX H O W THE HIDDEN IMPULSES VARY ALONG W I T H THE VARIATION OF O U T W A R D BEHAVIOUR As long as a man clings to renunciation [the thought of] departure from this life is continually alive in his mind. And every hour he meditates on the life after resurrection, contriving to prepare what is necessary for that state. And a contempt for all honour and comfort of the body is sown in his mind, and the thought of the baseness of the world moves in him at all times. And he is courageous and always possesses the heart of a hero in all fear and danger threatening death. For he is not afraid even of death, because he perpetually looks at it very near from a short distance and expects it. And his care is cast on God, with full, undoubting confidence. And when troubles oppose him, he, as a man that knows assuredly that they will prepare crowns for him, bears them with perfect joy, while his soul rejoices and exults when receiving them. F o r - h e knows that it is God who sends them, because of the profits of things which remain unknown, in the hidden acts of providence. But when it happens that on account of some cause some transitory thing falls to his lot by the action of him that cunningly devises all evils, at once love of the body begins to stir in his soul and he thinks of a long life and deliberations connected with bodily comfort germinate in him every moment. But, if possible, he witholds his body from being hurt by anything. And he contrives all things which can be utilized for the comfort of the body, and becomes wanting in that freedom which is not subject to any deliberation of fear, and consequently bestows his care and deliberation on
362
HOW T H E
HIDDEN
IMPULSES
VARY
ALONG
ETC.
all these things, namely the emotions that cause fear and the things that produce terror. F o r the courage of the heart has been taken away from him, which he possessed in his soul while he was exalted above the world by his renunciation. A n d now that he has become an inheritor of the world, in accordance with the quantity of his possession he also has received fear for the law and the provision allotted to him by God. F o r the side to the service of which we prepare our members, is that to which we become servants with a submission involving total fear, according to the word of the Apostle 1 ). Anterior to all affictions is self-love. Anterior to all virtues is that a man despise comforts. He that feeds his body with comforts, is troubled in the place of peace. H e that indulges in luxury in his youth, will become a slave and sigh at the end. A s it is impossible that he, whose head is bound within the dark 2) bosom of the water, should smell the subtle air which is poured out into this empty bosom, so it is not possible that he whose mind is immersed in earthly care, should perceive with the smell of his soul the clear air of the new world. A s the smell of a deadly poison disturbs the constitution of the body, so does pernicions sight disturb the peace of the mind. A s it is not possible that health and illness should be in one body without one being destroyed by the other, so it is not possible that money and love be in one house without one destroying the other. A s it is not possible that glass remains whole in the neighbourhood of stone, so it is not possible that a saint should continually seek the sight of or discourse with a woman and that his purity should remain immaculate. A s trees are eradicated by the perpetual blows 3 ) of violent waters, so is the love of the world [eradicated] from the heart by the violence of temptations assailing the body. A s 4 ) solvent drugs purify the body from bad humours, so does the force of troubles purify the heart from affections. A s it is not possible that a dead man should perceive the things of life, so the soul of a solitary, who is buried in solitude as in a g r a v e , is exempt from the storm which usually blows on account of the apperception of things which pass among men. A s it is not possible for him that spares his adversary in the field of battle to avoid blows, so it is not possible that a champion 1 ) Cf. Rom. 8, 15
2) litt.: thick
3) K l & l C U *
4) Introduction
HOW THE HIDDEN IMPULSES
VARY
ALONG E T C .
363
should spare his body and that his soul should be saved from destruction. A s childhood, when terrified by frightful sights runs to seek refuge at the skirts of its parents, so the soul,
when
troubled by the terror of temptations, hastens towards G o d to seek shelter in perpetual beseechings. And as temptations assail, to the same extent it multiplies its beseechings. But when it has free-space, it expands itself in distraction. As be
those
who
scourged
on
are handed over to the j u d g e s in order to account
of their
evils,
become
humble
and
immediately confess their faults, when they come suddenly before the
scourges,
so
that
their
punishment
is lessened and
they are soon delivered through the agency of small troubles, but others of them are foolish
and obstinate and their scour-
ging is augmented and at last, after much scourging, with lacerated any
backs, they confess against their will, without gaining
profit;
so
unto justice,
when we are handed over from divine mercy
for
the
faults to which we have b e c o m e accus-
tomed without returning to the [good] direction, and the J u d g e of the world orders us to stretch temptations,
lest
our scourging
ourselves before the rod ot in
the world
to be,
become
h e a v y ; if, as soon as the rod of the J u d g e approaches us, we humble ourselves and recollect our forfeits and confess before
54 2
the
avenger,
but
if we b e c o m e obstinate in troubles, and confess not that
we
were the
served
even
sometimes
we
shall
cause more
soon
be
saved by small temptations;
of them ourselves and that we have dethan these, and if we vituperate men and
demons and sometimes even G o d ' s justice and as-
sume the attitude of victors though we do not think and say that our works are like theirs, and if we do not think of the fact
that
God
knows
and
recognizes
us better than
we do
ourselves, and that the j u d g m e n t of the Lord is over the whole earth
and that
no man is chastised without His orders, then
our distresses assail us as they come, and our trouble becomes violent, chain,
and they hand us over the one to its fellow as in a till
know
we
ceive our sins; us even
to
ourselves
and
become humble and per-
for without apperception it is not possible for
come
to
[good] direction;
then at last when we
have suffered many troubles, we confess our sins in a confession without lation.
profit
A n d also
and without gathering from it any conso-
this that a man perceives his sins, is a gift
which is allotted by God to the mind, when H e sees that one
364
HOW THE HIDDEN IMPULSES VARY ALONG ETC.
has been fatigued by various temptations, lest he depart this world under all these distresses and troubles, without profit; and [also this is a gift: to perceive] that we have not lacked insight on account of obstinacy, but on account of ignorance. Some depart this world under these circumstances, without confessing that they are guilty, but litigating and vituperating. God, however, who is compassionate, looks to whether they humble themselves, that He may forgive them and give them expansion. Not only that He will put an end to their temptation,* but H e will even forgive their sins at a faint confession o of their heart. As a man who offers a large offering to the king and tries 543 to make his face benignant, so he that sheds tears in prayer before God, the king of all the worlds, makes to pass away all the degrees of his sins, and is even granted to see His face beingnant. As the lamb that leaves the pen, and in its error comes before the den of the wolves, so is the solitary who separates himself from the communion of his fellows under the pretext of lonely dwelling, and constantly visits spectacles and the distraction of the town. As a man who bears on his shoulder a pearl of great price and goes on an ill-famed way so that he is in perpetual fear of being robbed, so is he that bears the pearl of chastity and walks in the world the way of the enemies. Before he enters the chamber of the grave, which is the place of confidence, it is not to be expected that it will escape robbers and pluderers. Perhaps he that is not afraid, is able [to go that way]; even this man does not know either, on which spot or from where or at which moment he will suddenly be assailed and robbed of his hope. Some are robbed at the gate of their house, namely in old age. As a man who drinks wine at the time of mourning and gets drunk and forgets all the suffering of his sorrow, so is he that, having got drunk by the love of God in this world which is a place of w a i l i n g , forgets his sorrow and all his distress and, through his drunkenness, becomes apathetic against all the affections of sin. Whose heart is supported by hope in God, his soul is a swift beast of wings. He whose spirit is at all times exalted above the earth and who flies above the sky with the thoughts 544 of his deliberations, and is in continual prayer, is as a man
HOW T H E HIDDEN IMPULSES V A R Y ALONG ETC.
365
who has the wind as his driving animal, so that his enemy cannot reach him. E v e r y time the latter seeks to join him, he flies away from him. A s a man who has an advocate in the court of justice, so is he that is compassionate to the troubled ones. A s a man who is amidst dangerous storms on the ocean and casts his utensils from the ship, so is he that despises the hindrances on his godly way in this world which is an ocean ready to suffocate him. Hindrances will not fail. W h a t doest thou in a house which is not thine ? T h e sight of a corpse ought to be for thee an instruction concerning thy departure from here. W h y doest thou multiply bonds to thyself? Gain thy life before thy light grow dim and thou seek help without finding it. This life has been given thee for repentance; do not spend it with various things. T h e cross is the gate of mysteries; here takes place the entrance of the mind unto the knowledge of the heavenly mysteries. T h e knowledge of the cross is hidden within the sufferings of the cross. A n d in accordance with communion with them is the apperception of the cross, according to the word of the A p o s t l e T h e greater place the suffering of Christ takes in us, the greater becomes our consolation in Christ. Consolation means contemplation, which is psychic sight. Sight gives birth to consolation. It is not possible that our soul produce spiritual -fruits, except when our heart is dead to the world. F o r the Father quickens the soul that has died the death of Christ, in contemplation of all the worlds. Another observation. If thou diest not to the world, the 545 spiritual A d a m will not be quickened in thee. When a man, by being offered spiritually, dies to all dealings of this dwellingplace, and trusts his life to the life after the resurrection, Grace will dwell with him. A n d his behaviour is spiritually strengthened. A n d when he hates the world, he perceives the behaviour of the new man who is exalted above the filth of human habitation and is deemed worthy of divine revelations. It is not possible for us to be dead to the world in the world, as long as our mind desires comforts, and the world, by its affairs, is placed before our senses and by apperception 1) Cf. Philipp. 4, 10
366
HOW T H E HIDDEN IMPULSES VARY ALONG
ETC.
renews recollection and incites the body unto seeking what it wishes, by close contact with [worldly] things, by sight, hearing, touch, smell and taste. The soul's being dead to the world is the heart's being free from the thought of its recollections and the soul's being void of the deliberations concerning [worldly] things and the will being cut off from the love of thinking upon them. For it is not possible that our heart be in peace exalted above disturbance and in serenity of love lifted up above the world, when there are poured out into it recollections that renew through meetings with things by the senses, their receptacles. The mortification of the soul to the world cannot be acquired, if not the body be also beyond apperception and sight of things.
LXXX 546 ON VIGILS A N D ON T H E M A N Y D I F F E R E N T K I N D S O F L A B O U R S D U R I N G T H E M A N D T H A T I T IS N O T BECOMING T H A T T H E AIM O F O U R L A B O U R S S H O U L D BE T H E F U L F I L L I N G O F A Q U A N T I T Y B U T [TO W O R K ] IN F R E E D O M A N D W I T H D I S C R I M I N A T I O N AS CHILDREN OF GOD W H O WORK WITH THEIR F A T H E R IN T H E A L E R T N E S S O F L O V E A N D H O W P R E C I O U S T H E L A B O U R O F VIGILS IS M O R E T H A N T H A T O F ALL OTHER DUTIES AND W H A T THIS LABOUR I M P O S E S ON T H O S E W H O C H O O S E IT A N D H O W T H E Y H A V E T O W A L K IN IT AND ON T H E G I F T S O F W H I C H T H E Y A R E D E E M E D W O R T H Y BY G O D A N D ON T H E B A T T L E S A G A I N S T T H E M ON T H E PART OF T H E PRINCIPAL OF THIS WORLD When thou desirest to rise for the service of thy vigils, then, with the help of our Lord, do as I say to thee. Bend thy knees as usually, and rise. Then do not begin with thy service at once. But when thou hast prayed and concluded and signed thy heart and thy limbs with the living sign, rise for a short time, in silence, till thy senses are at rest and thy emotions in peace. Then lift up thy inward gaze towards our Lord and beseech Him passionately that He may support thy
ON V l G l L S AND ON THE MANY DIFFERENT KINDS ETC.
367
weakness. A n d let the words of thy tongue and the emotions of thy heart be to the pleasure of His will. A n d say thus, quietly in the prayer of thy heart: My Lord and my God, maker of thy creation, to whom our affections are revealed as well as the weakness of our nature and the strength of our fiend, do Thou guard me against his wickedness, for his power is strong and our nature is wretched and our strength is weak. Thou art benignant who art acquainted with our 547 weakness and bearest the difficulties of our illness; guard me from the disturbance of deliberations and the vehemence of affections and make me worthy of this holy service. Lest I spoil its taste by my affections and be found audacious before Thee. But with pure deliberations and in clearness of thought let me stand before T h e e , as is beautiful to T h y holiness, for the splendour of which the chariot with the Seraphs, who sanctify and praise the holiness of T h y being with vibrating hot emotions to their delight, are not sufficient. A n d with these deliberations thy heart will suddenly be opened by grace and thou wilt shed tears at the beginning of thy prayer. A n d thy deliberations will be purified by the recollection of the Lord. A n d thy soul will receive quiet and pure chastity. A n d while thy spirit is concentrated and pure, thou wilt begin thy service, without disturbance, and thou wilt continue it till the end, with delight. It is becoming for us to continue our service, with complete freedom, apart from all disturbing thoughts of youth. If we see however that there is not much time and light dawns before we have finished, we should leave out on purpose and consciously one or two of the usual eulogies rather than to let perturbancy spoil the taste of our service and disturb also the Psalms of the morning. If during thy service, a deliberation says to thee whisperingly: Hasten somewhat, let us do much work, then thou wilt soon be ready — do not look at it. If, however, it urges thee, recite in inverse order some m a r m i t a ' s o f the Psalter; and every sentence, the sense of which involves the sign of the 548 cross, repeat it many times; and if it disturbs or troubles thee a g a i n : then cease reciting Psalms, and kneel in prayer, and s a y : I do not wish to count milestones, but I seek to enter 1 ) tenth part
368
ON VIGILS A N D
the
Apartment.
aim,
I will
desert,
ON T H E
Every
go.
The
walked
MANY
way
which
people
who
DIFFERENT
leads
KINDS
me
fashioned
ETC.
quickly the
to
the
calf in the
forty years erring in the desert, went up and
down mountains and hills, but the promised land they did not even see from afar. And
if, during thy vigils, long standing o v e r c o m e thee b y
its duration, and thou become w e a k by fatigue, and deliberation
say
through
to
thee,
or
rather
that
cunning
one
who
speaks
it as through the serpent: Finish now, because thou
hast no strenght to stand —
then a n s w e r : N o t so, but let us
sit down, this is much better than to sleep. F o r even though I do
not
recite
a
mind
is occupied
Psalm, let my tongue be silent, while m y with prayer
and intercourse with G o d .
To
be a w a k e is at any rate better than sleep. Vigils do not wholly demand standing nor solely the reciting of Psalms. But some spend the whole night with the recitation of
Psalms;
some
with
kneelings
and passionate prayers and
humble prostrations on the e a r t h ; some with w e e p i n g and tears and bewailing of their sins. It is said concerning one of our Fathers, that for forty years his prayer consisted in one sentence: I h a v e sinned, as m a n ; do
Thou
as
God
forgive me. A n d the F a t h e r s and bethren
549 heard him repeating this sentence, weeping passionately, without
ceasing.
And
this
prayer
alone,
during
night and
day,
took for him the place of service. Some
pass
of Psalms
a small part of the evening with the recitation
and
the
rest
of the
night with songs and glorifi-
cations and hymns and other mournful melodies. Others assign the
hours
of the
night to liturgical recitations; and between
every two parts they enliven and enjoy themselves by reading the
Scripture.
Others
impose
upon themselves the rule, that
they never shall bend their knees, not even in the prayer forming the conclusion to a marmita 1 ), though this is the custom of those
who
practice
vigils.
But they pass the whole night
in one attitude. Concerning
one
of the saints, therefore, it is said that be-
cause the demon of fornication made war against him and did not to
neglect the
to
labour
use
against him any means, he g a v e himself
of vigils
1) See above, p. 357, note
and
imposed
upon himself the rule,
ON VIGILS AND ON THE MANY DIFFERENT KINDS ETC.
369
that he would never bend his knees, but stood the whole night, his eyes open, without bending his knees, till morning. All these distinctions are in the labour of vigils, and by them the virtous put off the old man who is depraved by the desires of seduction and put on Christ and are saved. On account of these kinds of labour performed in wisdom, the saints are deemed worthy of ecstasy caused by divine revelation, which is exalted above fleshly thought. While the virtuous in their vigils enjoy such various kinds 55° of things, they pass, without dejection the whole space of the long hours of night, while their soul exults and rejoices and forgets the coat of flesh, woven from affections, with which it was clad. A n d on account of the delight and the joy of their heart, they do not remember sleep. F o r they imagine themselves to have put off the body and to be already in the state which comes after the resurrection. A n d in consequence of their great j o y , they leave their Psalms from time to time, and they fall on their faces on account of the power of the gladness which moves in their soul. A n d the whole long night is to them as the day, and darkness as sunrise, on account of the hope which elevates their heart and makes them drunk with its thought and by the blazing of their mind which burns by the recollection of future good. A n d while the tongue continually plays on the spiritual harp, mind is occupied with its own things; sometimes it turns towards the understanding of the sentences, sometimes it pushes away the foreign deliberation which tries to enter in. Sometimes, when it becomes weary, it turns towards the contents of the daily recitation. A n d the recollection which it has gathered from it and collected in its treasury, causes at these times emotions at which the mind delights, so that there is no room at all for foreign deliberations. A n d then quickly the mind is drawn towards the understanding of prayer and Psalms, lest, by abiding too long in this state — profitable though meditation upon them may be — it should be bereaved of discourse with G o d and the light of contemplation which the mind is wonted to receive from prayer without distraction in which it speaks in loneliness with its Lord 551 through the secrecy of the heart, in humility of deliberations. 1) K ' T O - a . ^
proselyte
Verh. A f d . L e t t e r k . 1922 (Wensincli)
24
3^0
ON VIGILS AND ON THE MANY DIFFERENT
KINDS
ETC.
In these and similar things they pass their whole lifetime, every one of them pleasing his Lord by his labours in accordance with his degree and his power, in total application of will. If anyone, however, desire to give his body some rest, he may finish and sit down [turned] towards- the East. A s long however as he is sitting, he shall not allow his mind to be idle; but he shall meditate and think and deliberate on the greatness of this duty; and on what his performance i s ; and how it is done, and how great his crown, and how glorious the fruit of his labour is; and what watchfulness it demands; and how the ancients have dealt with it, and of what things they have been deemed worthy through the fulfilment of their struggles; and how by the mercy of Jesus he was turned from the world, he that was occupied with vain labours the end of which is destruction from G o d and reprehension through sins ; and how this mercy brought him to this performance of the angels, the hope of which is a veracious hope, and its j o y is a j o y which is beyond the power of distress and its confidence a confidence which cannot be fallacious. F o r a man may work ever so much, his labours are small compared with that which he will receive at his end in the pledge of good things, to the delight of his soul. While these and similar deliberations are in his heart and he is astonished at them he places his mind in the spiritual chariot and lets it fly and be occupied with all the holy F a 552 thers of all generations, the inheritance of whose behaviour he possesses, [thinking of] how every one of them has accomplished, with various districtions, this spiritual service ; and of how they have abandoned the inhabited world and mankind and have withdrawn themselves from the allurements of the world and from the disturbancies of life and have gone and hidden themselves in mountains and caverns and removed and and lonely places, because they saw that this course of life cannot be accomplished among men, on account of the many hindrances; and have become dead in their lifetime for the sake of life in God, erring through desert places and between rocks as those who have lost their w a y ; people [of such worth] that every single one's glory is not equalled by the whole world. Some of them lived on rough and steep rocks, some at the foot of mountains, or in deep valleys; some in the
ON VIGILS AND ON T H E MANY DIFFERENT KINDS ETC.
371
caves of the ground and in caverns, as those who dig after foxes in order to surprise then ; some in graves and on mountain cliffs. Some have constructed a small hovel in the desert and passed there the rest of their life •, some have built a small pen on the top of a mountain, viz. a small cell, and have dwelt therein with pleasure as if in a royal palace. And because they did not care for their livelihood, they only thought of how each of them should please God and accomplish his struggle beautifully. And what kind of a life did these saints lead in these places? 553 Did they live with the body, or a life above flesh and blood? Did they not become pusillanimous in that total desert? Did the power of endurance not abate during that long time, did the body not become weak during that prolonged period, through their being deprived of the use of natural needs? How was human life preserved in them ? And in all this, what struggles have they endured and what troubles! How strenuously and without perturbance did they endure various difficult wars in which the evil spirits assailed them! How did they not in their life time — even till the end — become relaxed so as to neglect their difficult and wearying labours? How did their spirit not become sorry through this utter loneliness, cut off from all visible consolations ? Is there really all this strength in human nature; and how did divine power preserve them without injury, under all those various temptations; and how did it prepare for every one of them by various provisions, in accordance with one's dwelling place, the fulfilling of the need which was necessary for him? Some of them were sustained by a bird. Behold, these last sixty years I have the half of my bread from such a bird. Others are sustained by some tree or palm in a supernatural way, as one of them has said, viz. the bishop who repented in the desert. I am now in this desert nine and forty years. God has granted me life 554 through this palm. And so it was with the saint who was in his monastery, in a fallen state, for six months; and who fled and went unto the interior of the desert in order to repent his sin. W h e n his stomach ached through and through, the angel came and cured him. Some are sustained by the beasts; as that blessed one who dwelt in a cavern in the desert of Sodom. Some, who are dwelling in the desert near the inhabited world, are furnished by men, as that strenuous man whom
372
ON VIGILS AND ON T H E
MANY DIFFERENT
KINDS
ETC.
Serapion visited; and as the blessed Martinianus who dwelt in a lonely island and was visited by a merchant two times a year. W h e r e no habitation was near and there were no ways whatever, [divine power] visited them through an angel, as is said concerning the blessed Apelles who dwelt in the declivity of a mountain in a small grotto. His work consisted therein that he offered prayer to God during the whole day and a hundred times during the night. His food, without care on his part, came in the desert through an angel. H e was clad in a shirt, and on his head he wore a small cowl; and these remained on him in the desert, without becoming worn out. Doest thou see, how G o d cares for his soldiers in every respect? Others fed upon r o o t s ; others upon eatable greens, which grow of themselves; others upon crops which had to be watered and upon dried vegetables, which are sown on p u r p o s e ; others upon the fruits of trees. T o others a bed of parsley and a 555 streaming well were sufficient for the wants of this ephemeral life, in so far as the body is maintained by them, apart from profitable recollections, which at these times are stirred by grace, to the consolation of man. W h e n a man is occupied in his mind with these and similar things, he becomes drunk as it were with living wine, and forgets himself. T h e n he sees himself again and wonders that o O during the whole of this travel through the desert and during the meeting with saints, no injury at all has met the mind. A n d now it seems to him as if he were with those saints and saw them manifestly. A n d on account of this recollection of the behaviour of the saints which the mind imagines to itself through the remembrance of their tales, and through meditation upon t h e m , dejection vanishes; and languor is driven f o r t h ; the limbs are s t r e n g t h e n e d ; sleep is driven away from the eyelids; the spirit is strengthened and throws fear a w a y ; distraction is crushed heroically; the mind is concentrated; a fervent heat burns in the heart and unspeakable joy arises in the soul. Further sweet tears moisten the c h e e k s ; spiritual exultation makes the mind d r u n k ; inexplainable consolations are received by the soul; hope supports the heart and strengthens it. T h e n it is to him as if he dwelled in heaven, during his vigils that are so full of good things. By these and similar ways those proceed who perform vigils with discrimination. F o r there is nothing which makes the mind
ON VIGILS AND
ON THE
MANY
DIFFERENT
KINDS
ETC.
373
556 pure and glad and enlightens it and expels evil deliberations so that the soul exults, to such an extent as continual vigils do. For
this reason
labour the
of vigils,
all
and
the
Fathers
clung
to
were
persevering
in this
the rule of abiding a w a k e in
nights, during the whole course of their b e h a v i o u r ; espe-
cially because they heard our Saviour in several places warning us earnestly, pray
by
His
living
word:
Watch
ye
therefore and
a l w a y s A n d : W a t c h and pray that y e enter not into
temptation 2 ). on.
And
And
it was
again:
Pray
not sufficient
and to
do
warn
not us
faint 3 ) by
and
words
so
only,
but H e g a v e us even an example in His person thereby that He
always
things. for
honoured
And
practice
of prayer a b o v e all other
therefore H e perpetually separated Himself, also
prayer,
place,
the
not arbitrarily, but chose for time, night, and for
the
desert;
that
we,
avoiding
all crowds and tumult,
might be able to pray in solitude, as is becoming. Also
all
the
revelations
which happened to the saints, on
various subjects, —• whether they served to make them prudent or to common instruction — the
night
and
at the
usually happened to them during
time of prayer. Therefore our Fathers
h a v e received this elevated instruction concerning prayer as it were from Christ; and the state of waking during prayer they chose in the first place, according to the order of the A p o s t l e , 557 for solitude and reclusion from the whole world, in order that they might be, without a break, in the vicinity of G o d , through continual prayer. T h e y fled into solitude not only lest anything should prevent them from constant prayer, but lest any foreign thing
from
without
mind,
and
their
should
gladdening
hurt
them and disturb their pure
vigils
should be troubled, which
are the light of the soul. T h e y also fed themselves moderately lest the vapour which rises from a full stomach should obscure the
mind
so
as
to
deprive
it of its discriminating quiet and
t a k e a w a y the spiritual delight which is granted through prayer. In short:
they were zealous in e v e r y respect that they
might
be able to speak with G o d without a screen, as much as possible, the mind not being hindered b y anything at all. T h e r e f o r e , because Satan knows, that all these g o o d things are collected in this wonderful performance which occupies the place
of the
1) Luke 21, 36
soul
with regard to all the sundry members of 2) Matth. 26,41
3) 1 Thess. 5, 17
374
VIGILS
O N
AND
ON T H E
MANY
DIFFERENT
KINDS
ETC.
the body of excellence, he envies it more than all other duties the which all men know b y experience and there is nothing in man zeal,
at which
and
vigils —
which
he aims he
and
prepares
against
himself
which he directs his
to
combate more than
whether those of a solitary, or of a coenobite, or a
layman. H e r e he cannot but show himself openly, in manifest war against at
all
he
envies
the
man, without an intermediary, without perceiving gifts which those receive who perform v i g i l s ; but
them
on account of their chaste habit of standing,
and through their perseverance, against sleep, in waking, and glorifications, and singing of Psalms, and prayers and inclinations, and stretching [of the hands], and prostrations, and lying down
on
whole
night.
the
earth, and beseechings of the heart during the He
is especially
envious
because others lie on
their beds as dead at whom he makes mock, according to his pleasure, by sordid visions and impure phantasies, and immerses them
during
the
whole
night as
it were in mire by various
phantasies during the h e a v y sleep that has its origin in a full stomach —
whereas
these
depart
hence with their soul unto
the w a k i n g state of resurrection. A n d he sees them, though still bound
under the curtain of the body, while perpetually w a v e s
of mortality assail them and they are confined by a life limited under the government of the air of this world — still showing in their mortal nature a type of future behaviour. A
great
power
time,
more
than that
saints
used
bating
to
against
of sleep,
and
possesses prayer which is offered at night-
pray
offered in during
expelling
day.
Therefore
all the
the night, while they were com-
heaviness
the
the
bodily
of the body and the sweetness nature.
As
also
the Prophet
s a y s : I am weary with my g r o a n i n g ; all the night m a k e I my bed
to
swim 1), while
he
was
sighing
in passionate
prayer,
from the depth of his heart. A n d further: I rose in the midst of
night
to
praise
Thee
because
of T h y
judgments,
Thou
righteous one 3). F o r every request which they demanded from G o d with power, they armed themselves with prayer in vigils, and at once they received what they had asked. T h e r e is nothing so feared, even by Satan, as prayer which is
offered during
vigils.
A n d even if it takes place with dis-
traction, it does not return fruitless, unless that which is asked, i) Ps. 6, 6
2) ?
ON V I G I L S
AND
ON T H E
MANY
DIFFERENT
KINDS
ETC.
375
should be what is not becoming. Therefore he engages himself in severe battle with them, in order to turn them away from this performance, if possible, namely those who are constantly at it. Those who are somewhat strengthened against his evil stratagems, and have tasted the gifts of G o d which are granted during vigils, and experienced personally the greatness of G o d ' s help which has presented itself to them, despise him utterly, him and all his devices. Therefore, more than the whole community of the church, the order of the solitaries wages war with them, in the struggle of prayer and vigils, in the first place, because they are free from visible things; in the second place, because of their continual solitude. F o r , because they are free from incitements, he is not able to turn away their deliberations from the thought of God and to detain them from continual beseechings, in their war against him, so that from the beginning of their apprenticeship till their old a g e they do not neglect the labour of vigils in any way, but it is a performance well known to them, to stand during the whole night; even as we learn from the written stories of every one of them. 560
F o r M a r Athanasius, says in his story on the mirror of the solitaries 1 ), that he kept vigils plentifully, so that he passed the main part of the nights without sleep. A n d it was in this point that Satan found an occasion to w a g e his first battle against the victorious one; and this happened while he was still a boy. W e often read in many stories, that he did not neglect vigils during his whole lifetime, as he did not even when he visited others; as for instance, when he went to see the blessed F a ther Paul, when they ate their meal [furnished to them] through a bird, and stood in prayer during the whole night. Which of the saints, though possessing all the virtues together, could neglect this duty, and not be rockened to be idle without it? F o r this is the light of the mind. B y it the intellect is elevated and the spirit concentrated, the mind flies [on high] and gazes at spiritual things and becomes young and illuminated in prayer. By it the goods of future life, and the presents the mysteries of which are indicated in the holy scriptures are given as a pledge. Therefore our Fathers did not
1) A.thanasius in "his Efistola work meant here?
ad Monachos does not speak of vigils. Or is Euagrius'
376
ON V I G I L S
AND
ON T H E
MANY
DIFFERENT
KINDS
ETC.
neglect this labour from the beginning of their apprenticeship till [they reached] the measure of perfection, so that, even at the time of old age which when a man can hardly stand on his feet, they did not let languor gain power over themselves so as to detain them from continual vigils by giving their 561 bodies rest in a short sleep ; as we also learn from the stories which are told concerning that perfect image of excellence and of all spiritual beauties, I mean the blessed Arsenius. When that famous man of Skete had withdrawn himself from all intercourse with men and removed his dwelling-place to a long distance even from the brethren, he g a v e himself wholly to the wonderful performance of vigils. His standing during vigils differed also from that of all the Fathers of his time. T o which also his story is witness. On the evening before Sunday he set his back to the sun and stretched his hands unto heaven, till the sun rose before him. A g a i n in another place: he passed the whole night in vigils; and when, towards morning he wished to take rest, because nature demanded it, while he struggled with sleep, he said: G o and leave me, evil maid. A n d so he expelled sleep quickly and remained awake. A n d this happened at that high age, concerning which it is said that it had bent him. A n d in order that his assiduity in vigils may better be known, let us hear another story concerning him; how he persevered during all his old a g e and weakness, a man ninety 562 years old. Once he called two of his disciples, who were highly esteemed Fathers, and said to them : Because the demons struggle with me and I am not sure that they will not betray me during sleep, [come and] labour with me this night in vigils, and guard me and look whether I fall asleep during vigils. So one sat down at his right hand and one at his left, from the evening till the morning. [Afterwards] they said: W e have slept and waked, but we have not seen him sleeping at all. A n d when dawn began, whether he assumed such an attitude as to make us believe that he slept, or whether sleep really overwhelmed him, we do not know. Three times [we heard[ his breath leave his nostrils, then he rose and said to us: I have slept, did I not? W e answered and said to him: W e do not know it, for we have slept. In these delightful labours of vigils those rejoiced who were the leaders of our course. W h a t then was the delight which
ON VIGILS AND ON THE MANY DIFFERENT KINDS ETC.
¡77
the glorious Arsenius gathered from this vexation with which he tortured his body to such an extent? It is clear that he did not vainly persevere in all these things. For we see that not only his inner man became enlightened on account of his delight, by the exalted ray, but also his outward man, which is material and corruptible nature, was clad with the glory with which all the saints will be clad in the end, on account of the variation which the whole inner nature of men undergoes. 563 Wherefrom do we learn this? Once one of the brethren went to the cell of Aba Arsenius and looked through the window and saw the Father standing who was wholly as burning fire. For this brother who had gone to see the Father, was worthy of this sight: he did not belong to the small but to the great ones. The blessed one was famous on account of his exalted behaviour and all Fathers desired to see him. And because they especially desired to see him, [it was] as Aba Macarius said to him : Why doest thou flee from us! Therefore the strangers who came to Skete desired chiefly to see him and to receive his blessing. — When that brother knocked at his door, the Father came outdoors. And when he saw that his visitor was astonished at what he saw, he said to him : W a s it time for thee to knock? Hast thou seen anything? The other answered: No. So he dismissed him. And what shall I say concerning the blessed Pacomius? T h e counterpart of the former, and among others the chief, the valiant in strife, the fervent and heroic in his vigils, the man who passed a long time fighting against the demons as a glorious champion, in the way of the holy Antonius, who, because many demons used to come to him during the nights, asked God during his vigils that He might free him from sleep, so that night and day he should be without sleep, so as to be able to subdue the power of the Fiend. As it has 564 been said: Let me not turn my back before having crushed them, for they are powerless against the faith of the Lord. — Then this gift was granted him, as he had asked, for a long time. And be cause his heart was pure — the sight of his soul having been purified through vigils and solitude and prayer — he saw God, who is invisible, as it were in a mirror. These are the fruits of vigils, and these are the boons of those who perform them, and these are the crowns [granted on account of persevering in] this struggle.
378
ON VIGILS
AND
ON T H E
MANY
DIFFERENT
KINDS
ETC.
T h o u also, o brother, if thou desirest to be the fellow of these saints and an heir of their behaviour, cling to solitude, without dejection, that thou also mayest persevere in the work of prayer without a break. Bear its troubles, in order to acquire its g o o d .
And
if thy body should be bent down by different
reasons and desist from labour, and thou shouldst not be able to accomplish the works of solitude as usual, and thou shouldst begin
to
be
despised
and worried —
by
thy
heart and to become dejected
because this is the work of the heart, especi-
ally for those who have the right intention: not to desist from reprehending and reproving —
do not s a y : W o e to me, that
I am idle, and it would be better for me to be in the world and to
perform
reputation
any work whatever, and not possess an idle
of solitude
and
reclusion,
and
yet
to cease from
performance, being a solitary and lonely, yet afar from duties. 565 D o
not say
of our
this.
For
weakness;
He
God's asks
lovingkindness
man
bears
the load
from what he has, and
He
knows us better than w e do ourselves what our strength is. When
thy
art
not
able
the
laziness
strength to
is sufficient, work.
perform
of thy
but
solitude
little, thou and
And
even if thou
must bear with j o y
be patient. A n d thou must
know that, if thou leavest solitude, even the thought will not stay with thee which causes thee to be chastised by thy conscience on account of laziness. O n the c o n t r a r y : many circumstances will injure thee on account of distraction and laxity of the senses, which destroy even that which has been performed b y thee before, because the g r a c e of solitude has been taken from
thee. A n d thou wilt fall into temptations and many cir-
cumstances will befall thee, of which thou didst not think. If thou doest fall into temptations, do not despair. F o r there is no merchant who travels on seas and roads without suffering losses ; and there is no husbandman who simply reaps the w h o l e ; and there is no champion who suffers not blows and strokes even if he gains victory in the end. S o in the things of G o d , in the
things
of the
merchants
who
go
this invisible road,
there are profits and losses, blows and victory. W h e n thou art hit, do not turn thy back. Pardon
me.
AN ANSWER
TO
A BROTHER WHO
HAD
ASKED
ETC.
379
LXXXI 566 A N A N S W E R T O A B R O T H E R W H O H A D A S K E D HIM W H Y W H E N OUR LORD HAS DEFINED MERCY AS SIMILITUDE T O T H E G R E A T N E S S OF T H E F A T H E R IN H E A V E N T H E S O L I T A R I E S H O N O U R S O L I T U D E M O R E T H A N IT? A N D A N A P O L O G Y O F T H I S P O I N T A N D T H A T I T IS N O T B E C O M I N G T O N E G L E C T T H E DISTRESSED A N D SICK W H E N T H E Y A R E
NEAR
It is well that thou hast brought forward from the Gospel a comparison and a tested example for the great duty of solitude, as if we were opponents to it or tried to reject it as something superfluous. For our Lord has defined mercy as the similitude to the Father by which those who perform it, can approach Him. This is true. A n d we, the solitaries, do not honour solitude without mercy, though we try to remain far from care and trouble, as much as possible. Not that we deny necessary things, when they present themselves, but we care for solitude, because in it we are constantly with God in lonely intercourse, by which it is more possible to be purified from perturbance and to approach unto quiet of mind, though such cases are rare. But when it is necessary, we will not neglect mercifulness, compelling ourselves perpetually to be inwardly full of mercy toward all kinds of rational beings, at all times. For so the doctrine of our Lord orders, and this is the distinction of our solitude, and it is not due to fortune. So 567 none of us neglects to show this inward virtue, — when the time corresponds with the work and the necessity — making known his love openly, by deeds; especially those who have not laid themselves wholly under the rule of solitude do so. But solitude to such ones means that they never meet anyone, except once a week. T h e y have not cut themselves off, by the definition of their rule, from showing their fellow man deeds of mercy; only that one does so who is very devoted and solitary so that he avoids the sight of men. For we know, that without love of the fellow-man, the mind is not able to become illuminated by intercourse with and love unto God. Therefore, which of the says solitaries, who possessed food and
380
AN
ANSWER
TO A B R O T H E R WHO
HAD
ASKED
ETC.
clothing, could see his neighbour hungry and naked and persevere in withholding his hand? Or which of them, when his brother according to the flesh was sick and tormented and destitute of visitors, has honoured the rule of his reclusion more than the life of his fellow, on account of love of solitude? W h e r e , however, such circumstances, are not at hand, we keep in mind love and mercy unto the fellow man. W h e r e practice is near, God demands from us plainly that we perform it actually. 6 5§ This is well known, that if we h a v e acquired nothing, we are not allowed to expose ourselves to care and disturbance for the sake of the poor. But it is demanded of us [to give] from what we have. A n d when our dwelling place is far from the habitation of men and from intercourse with and sight of them, it is not necessary for us to leave our cell and our solitary and lonely dwelling-place and proceed erring through the world in order to visit the sick and to be occupied with similar practice. F o r it is known that he that does so descends from greatness to smallness. If however the recluse live in the dwelling place of many and is near to men through his constant dwelling with them, and he can t a k e rest when others are fatigued — be he healthy or ill — it is incumbent upon him to occupy himself with practice, without asking largely from others. But if he see the brother according to the flesh and to profession, in trouble, or r a t h e r : Christ rejected and vexed, and he flee and hide himself, pretending a sham solitude •— he that acts thus, is without mercy. D o not remind me of John of Thebais and Arsenius and the like. F o r who has given himself to such deeds and cared for the sick or the poor, and has despised solitude ? D o not approach unto their stories. F o r if thou art far from all comfort and all meeting with men as they were, thou art allowed to despise such works of [practice]. If however thou art far 569 from the state of the perfect and continually occupied with bodily labours and occupations, why then doest thou despise a commandment which suits thy measure, taking refuge with the grand behaviour of the saints, a behaviour to which thou art not near?
AN
ANSWER
TO A B R O T H E R
WHO
HAD
ASKED
ETC.
381
A s to me, I will not neglect to cite the example of Macarius the Great, which was written, as it were, to rebuke those who despise their brethren. One day he went to visit some one who was sick. When he asked him whether he desired anything, he answered : I want some fresh bread. Those solitaries, namely, usually baked bread for a y e a r ; so was the custom of those places. Then that blessed man, who was ninety years old, went from Skete the town of Alexandria, forty miles and more, carrying with him dry bread in his cowl. There he changed it and brought the sick what he desired. o o A n d an other, who was his equal, did what is still greater, a certain Agathon, exquisite above all the solitaries of his time, a man who loved silence and solitude better than all others. Once he went to a festival, in order to sell what he had made with his hands. T h e r e he found a stranger, lying in the street, sick. H e hired a house and stayed with him, working with his hands and making expenses on his behalf and paying the hire of the house. S o he served him for six months, till the sick had recovered. Then he said, as the story runs, I 570 wished that I could find a leper and give him my body and take his. •— This is perfect l o v e ; let us resemble our Fathers, that we may be thought worthy of grace, as they were. T h o s e who fear God, my beloved, are provided for so that they keep the commandments of our Lord without difficulty, even although that seems possible to them only through labours, and danger is thought to be incurred for its sake. Christ has defined and limited their totality to two commandments, which make up the sum of them all. I mean the love of God, and 0 what He taught to be the like of this: love unto His image. t> T h e possession of the former is the aim of spiritual contemplation ; that of the second, of contemplation and practice. Now, because God's nature is simple and not composite and invisible and not subject to want, the heart in its occupation equally does not require practice, nor bodily performance, nor material motion. Its performance is simple, and, on account of partial union in the [human] intellect, is in accordance with the simple nature of its adorable cause, which is exalted above the apperception of the senses and the flesh. T h e second commandment, love of mankind, is to be accomplished in a double way, in accordance with its double nature. I mean, that we accomplish it with the heart, invisibly, and
382
AN ANSWER TO A BROTHER
WHO HAD ASKED
ETC.
at the same time with the body, manifestly; but those things which are accomplished by practice, happen also in secret and in cooperation with the heart. F o r , as man's nature is composed of two parts, — namely body and soul — so all things regarding him are provided 571 in a double way, in accordance with the double character of his constitution. A s everywhere practice is anterior to contemplation, so it is impossible for man to elevate himself unto that elevated part, unless he has accomplished before, by practice, that which is lower. Therefore, let no one venture to speak concerning the acquisition of love of his fellowmen, as if he possessed it already in his soul, if the part is still wanting which has to be accomplished by the body, according to the opportunity for practice granted by strength, time and place. Then by faith has to be acquired that part of love which is received and recognized by the heart. When, on account of these things, we have been made ourselves known as faithful and true, as far as possible, then power is given to the soul to stretch itself towards the grand part of exalted and divine contemplation, by means of simple emotions and without comparison. W h e r e man has no opportunity to fulfill love of his fellow man practically by visible and by bodily things, it is sufficient in the eyes of God, that we keep love of our fellowman with our mind only, especially if we are able constantly to administer the service of that universal part, that is more excellent. If however we are destitute of the totality of that universal part, we should fill up this g a p by the lower commandment, namely by apperceptive practice, consisting therein that, according to the time happening, we should provide for the comfort of our brethren, by wearying our b o d y ; lest our liberty 572 become an opportunity for the flesh, in that we should occupy ourselves with idle things under the pretext of lonely intercourse. F o r it is known, that it is not allowed to demand from him who is wholly deprived of human intercourse and who is wholly occupied with God, being dead to all beings because of his being deprived of them — that he should serve men. He, however, whose rule of solitude forbids intercourse except on one day every week, and who, after the completion of his rule, meeting and mingling and consoling himself with
AN ANSWER TO A BROTHER
WHO HAD ASKED ETC.
383
man, neglects the trouble of his brethren and pretends to keep the rule of his week of prohibition, is anathema. F o r it is manifest that it is through a lack of mercy and on account of presumption and fallacious deliberations that such a one does not condescend to occupy himself with such things. He turns And house
that neglects the sick, shall not see light. A n d who a w a y his face from one in distress, may his day be dark. who despises the cry of the vexed, may the sons of his grope in darkness.
L e t us not dishonour the great name of ignorance. E v e r y duty has its time and place A n d then its service is accepted by God who service that deviates from this, is idle; for all to be brought to completion.
solitude by our and distinction. knows all. T h e measures have
H e that hopes that he will be consoled and visited in his misery by others, has to humble himself, so that he may be of use to his fellow man when the latter is tempted. Then during his service in solitude he may be joyful and free from presumption and the seduction of the demons. 573
It has been said by one of the holy Fathers, Euagrius, one of the initiated, that there is nothing which frees the solitary from the demon of haughtiness and aids to the attainment of the domain of chastity when the passion of fornication is burning, as to visit those who are thrown on their bed and vexed by bodily troubles. Great is the angelic service of solitude, when it is mingled with such a discrimination, for humbleness is needed. F o r we are plundered without our knowing it. W e have not said these things, my brethren, that we should despise the duty of solitude; for we have everywhere insisted upon it. W e are not now found to contradict our own words, and no one should pick out a single word from our argumentation and take this in his hand without discrimination, neglecting the rest. F o r I remember that in several places I have said with emphasis, that if a man should happen to be in his cell in total idleness, on account of the necessity of weakness, even then he should not choose to leave it completely and to perform his service outside it rather than to be idle, within. I have spoken of leaving the cell completely; but if a necessary practice presents itself, which demands some weeks, during which he may gain relief or the life of a fellow-man, he should not deem this idleness. If there is anyone who thinks
384
AN A N S W E R
TO A B R O T H E R
WHO HAD A S K E D
ETC.
himself to be one of the perfect and exalted above all that is here, on account of his continually being with God, and his being far from all visible practice, he rightly withdraws himself even from these things. Great is the labour of discrimination, to him that is spoken to by God. May He in His mercy, give us to accomplish the work of Him that has said: Therefore all things whatsoever ye would that men should do to you, do ye even so to them 1 ). To whom be glory and honour from the whole creation for ever and ever. Amen.
LXXXII H O W M U C H H O N O U R H U M I L I T Y POSSESSES A N D H O W H I G H ITS R A N K IS I dessire to open my month, my brethren, to speak on the elevated place of humility; but I am filled with fear, as a man who is conscious of the fact, that he will speak concerning God in a tale of his own speech. For humility is the garment of divinity; for the word which became man, put it on and spoke in it with us, through our body. And every one who puts it on in truth, by humility takes the likeness of Him that has descended from His height and concealed the splendour of His majesty and hidden His glory, lest the creation should perish by the sight of Him. For the creation was not able to see Him without His being united to a part of it which He should assume and speak with them through it; then the creation was able to hear the word of His mouth, face to face. The children of Israel were not able to listen to His voice, while He spoke with them from within the cloud; then should the creation be able to bear the sight of Him openly? For the children of Israel were so troubled that they said to Moses: Let us speak with thee, and listen thou to His words for us; but let Him not speak with us, lest we die 3 ). And so terrible was the sight, that even the intermediary said: I fear and tremble. For on mount Sinai the splendour of His glory revealed itself, and the whole mountain smoked and was shaken from 1) Matthew 7, 12
2) Exodus 20, 29
HOW MUCH HONOUR
HUMILITY POSSESSES ETC.
385
fear of His revelation that took place on it, so that even the beasts which approached the foot of the mountain, died. And all the children of Israel, on the order of Moses, prepared themselves, every one purifying himself for three days in order to be worthy of listening to the sound of God's speech and of seeing His revelation. And when the moment came, they were not able to bear the sight of His light, and the vehemence of the sound of His thunder. But now that He has poured out His grace on the world by His coming, not in earthquake nor in fire, nor with a terrible and vehement sound — but descending as the rain upon the lamb's fleece, and as the soft dew drops which softly descend upon the earth —• it has pleased Him to speak with us in a different way, concealing His majesty in the cover of flesh, speaking to us while being in us, in the garment which Providence had woven from the womb of the virgin, so that we, seeing Him speak with us as one of our race, should not be terrified by the sight of Him. Therefore, every one who puts on the garment in which our Creator appeared, by means of a body full of holiness, puts on Christ. For with the likeness in which H e appeared to His creation and in which He dealt 576 with us, He desired to clad His inner man and in it H e desired to appear to His fellow men, and with it [He desired] to be adorned in stead of with the garment of honour and outward glory. And therefore the creatures prostrate themselves as to a lord before every one whom they see being clad with this likeness, silent or speaking, on account of the honour of their Lord with which they saw Him clad and in which He wandered about. Which of the creatures should not be intimidated by the sight of the humble? Yet before the glory of humility revealed itself to all, this sight full of holiness was despised by them. But now that He has caused its majesty to dawn before the eye of the worlds, every man honours this likeness, wheresoever it shows itself. For through the mediation of it, the creation became worthy of receiving the sight of its Creator. And therefore [humility] is not despised even by the enemies of truth. And though he that has acquired it, should be a beggar in comparison with all creatures, yet he that has learned it, is honoured on account of it as if he were clad with crown and purple. No one will ever hate the humble nor assail him Verh. A f d . Letterk. 1922 (Wensinck).
25
386
HOW MUCH
HONOUR H U M I L I T Y
POSSESSES
ETC.
with a word, nor despise him. And because his Lord loves him, he is beloved by every one. Every one loves him, every one cherishes him. And wherever he comes, he is looked upon as an angel of light and distinguished by [signs of] honour. When the sage and the learned speak, they are ordered to be silent in order to give the humble an opportunity to speak. The eyes of everyone look on his mouth [in order to know] which word will come forth from it. Every one awaits his words, as words from God. The sense of his few words is investigated as the words of a philosopher. Sweet are his words to the ear of the sages, more than honeycomb is to the palate of those who taste it. And by everyone he is reckoned as a God, though he be simple in his words and of mean aspect. He that speaks of the humble in a despising way, is not reckoned as one living, but as one who opens his mouth against God. And the more despicable he is in his own eyes, the more honour is shown to him on the part of the creatures. The humble approaches the beasts of prey and as soon as their eye rests on him, their wildness is tamed and they come to him and accompany him as their master, wagging their tails and licking his hands and his feet. For they smell from him the smell which spread from Adam before his transgression, when the beasts gathered near him and he gave them names, in Paradise — the smell which was taken from us and given back to us anew by Christ through His advent, which made the smell of the human race sweet. And when the humble approaches the deadly reptiles, as soon as the touch of his hands attains to their bodies, the virulence of their deadly poison is cooled and with his hands he crushes them as if they were locusts x). And when he approaches the children of man they look upon him as upon their lord. W h y do I mention the children of man? Because, notwithstanding all the evil and stubbornness of the demons and all the pride of their own mind, as soon as they meet the humble, they become as dust: all their hardness becomes weak, their tricks become craftless, their cunnings idle. Now that we have shown in how great honour humility 1) With this passage is to be compared the Book of the Dove, p. 80
HOW MUCH HONOUR
HUMILITY POSSESSES ETC.
stands with God and how g r e a t will clearly show what humility deemed worthy of receiving it in shall m a k e a distinction between respects and him that has been humility.
387
a power is hidden in it, we is, and when a man will be its fulness, as it is. A n d we him who is humble in some deemed worthy of veracious
Humility is a mysterious power, which the perfect saints receive when they have reached accomplishment of behaviour. A n d this power is not granted except to those who, by the power of Grace, have personally accomplished the whole of excellence, in so far as nature in its domain is able to do this. F o r humility is all-comprehending excellence. A n d therefore we cannot deem every man humble, without discrimination, but only those who h a v e been deemed worthy of the rank mentioned. Not every one who in his nature is peaceful or quiet or discrete or without blame, has reached the rank of humility. But a humble one in truth is he that, possessing inwardly something worthy of being proud of, does not extol himself, but is as dust in his own thoughts. Nor do we call humble him that humbles himself on account of the recollection of his low characteristics or trespasses, which he remembers in order that his heart may become contrite and his mind with579 drawn from impulses of haughtiness, however praiseworthy this may be. F o r he still possesses deliberations of haughtiness. Humility however he does not possess, but, by various means, he seeks to draw it towards himself. And however praiseworthy this may be, as I hav.e said, he does not yet possess humility; he asks for it, but it is not-his. A perfectly humble one is he that does not need to find out a cause which should m a k e his mind humble. But he has fulfilled all these, and possesses humility as something natural, without bestowing any labour upon it; so that, even though he has received within him the great gift of which all creatures are not worthy — namely his [humble] nature — yet he is deemed a sinner and a simple man in his own eyes. And though he has penetrated into the mysteries of all spiritual kinds [of beings], and possesses great wisdom concerning all the creatures, he knows with perfect certainty that he knows nothing. A n d this he is not by any intermediary; but without compulsion he is so in his heart.
388
HOW MUCH HONOUR HUMILITY POSSESSES
ETC.
Can it be possible that man should be so, that nature can thus change him ? No. But do not doubt for this reason. For this mysterious strength which he has received, which makes him perfect in all excellence, without labour, is the strength which the blessed Apostles received under the aspect of fire. And on account of it our Saviour ordered them that they should not leave Jerusalem before having received the strength from on high, namely the Comforter which is the Spirit. And this is the spirit of visions. And this is what is said concerning them in the Scripture: To the humble the mysteries are revealed This means that the humble are deemed worthy 58° of receiving within them this spirit of revelations which explains the mysteries. And therefore it has been said by holy men, that humbleness makes the soul perfect by divine revelations. Therefore, no one should venture to think concerning himself that he has personally reached the rank of humility, on account of a single thought of contrition which has once risen [in his heart], or on account of a few tears which he has shed, or on account of one beautiful attribute which he possesses by nature or which he has acquired by compulsion; for he would in that case have acquired that which is the summit of all mysteries and the sum of all excellence in the domain of small labours and reckon these as the whole gift. But if a man has vanquished all contrary spirits, and if none of all the works of excellence fails him, for which he has not laboured in order to possess them, and if he has vanquished and subdued all forteresses of resistance, and if he then perceives with his spirit that his soul has received the gift, while the Spirit witnesses to his spiritaccording to the word of the Apostle, then this is the summit of humility. Blessed is he that has acquired it, for he at all times embraces Jesus' bosom. But if a man asks: W h a t shall I do? How can I acquire it? By what means shall I become worthy of receiving it? For, if I compel myself and think that I have acquired it, I see that unperceived contrary impulses err through my mind, and, consequently, I fall into despair. 581 He that asks this, is to be answered thus: It is expedient for the disciple to be as his master, and for the slave as his lord. Look at Him who has commanded this and who grants 1) Cf. Ps. 25,9
HOW
MUCH
HONOUR
HUMILITY
POSSESSES
ETC.
389
the gift, how H e acquired it; and strive thou to become like Him ; then thou canst do it. F o r He has said: T h e prince of this world cometh, and hath nothing in me 1 ). Doest thou see how humility is to be acquired by the accomplishment of all excellence? S o that we have to imitate Him that has commanded it. , T h e foxes have holes and the birds of the air have nests, but the son of man hath not where to lay his head' 3 ). T o whom be glory from all those who have become perfect and have been sanctified and become accomplished, in all generations, with the Father who sent Him and the Holy Ghost, now and always and for ever and ever. Amen. 1) John 14, 30
2) Matt. S, 20
GENERAL REGISTER [The
Roman
figures
refer
to
the
pages
o f the I n t r o d u c t i o n , the A r a b i c ones to those
of B e d j a n ' s text as p r i n t e d on the m a r g i n of the
Aberration
X X X I I , 3. 5, 6, 7 1 , 1 9 2 , 1 9 3 ,
3°7, 375, 494, 495, 5°3, Accidents
4 9 6 , 5 0 3 ; no fortuitous — Affectable spiritual o n e
176.
( T h e ) , 2 1 9 . See P e r f e c t .
state;
—
as o p p o s e d to the
122; —
of the m i n d ( h e a r t )
4 0 1 , 4 4 6 ; a f f e c t a b l e part of the soul 4 7 4 . Affections
on us 1 9 7 ; classes o f a n g e l s 1 9 9 s q . ; d o not r e a c h p e r f e c t i o n 2 2 5 ; —
5°5-
( r d X - H ^ J X X X I I I , 175 sqq.,
Accomplished
translation].
X X I X s q q . , X L I X , cease only
aberration Angelic
505.
service
Antonius 510,
185,
152
sq.
260,
311
Apartment Apathy
2 1 6 , 340, 5 1 2 ,
psychic —
478;
b y solitude 5 2 0 ; —
soul
r e g a r d i n g the a f f e c t i o n s
of
body
bodily,
and
soul
psychic
25,
397,
484,
—
Apelles
can-
Apperception.
a n d m i x e d —• 4 8 4 ;
roots
28;
mental
—
42;
easier
to
a v o i d e d than to b e v a n q u i s h e d 9 0 ; dangerous
power
solitary
of
the
203;
—
122 ;
consolation —•
a
—
be
their
bereave
the
1 2 4 ; torments of
fence against
virtues
2 1 7 5 m a r t y r s and a p o s t l e s e x e m p t f r o m 220,
432;
—
expelled
by
254, by weeping 2 5 3 ; —
solitude
corroborated by
l u x u r y 2 8 5 ; t h e v e i l of the — withdrawn
305 ; —
sometimes
b o r n f r o m distraction
3 3 2 ; p r o v i d e d b y the d e m o n s 382 s q . ; to
be
—
purified a w a y 4 4 4 ; the assaults of
the — 481;
—
244,
481; — the
compared with dogs 2 1 4 ,
dying
—• 4 8 4 ;
—
of
love
of
g l o r y and m o n e y 4 8 5 ; the c l o u d s of the —
of the martyrs 536 ; — •
(Apollos?)
4; —
494, 5 1 1 ;
5 1 3 ; — o n l y to be r e a c h e d
521;
n o t w h o l l y b e v a n q u i s h e d 2 8 ; their f o u r
sq.,
548.
temporary —
are 1 8 s q . , 4 3 2 , 4 7 2 ; their relation to the of the b o d y 2 5 ;
421
X L V I I I , 2 4 3 ; the w i n g s o f — 3 6 7 ;
definition o f —
25 s q . ; —
sq.,
563.
in the desert I ; — a n d w o r l d 1 8 ; w h a t t h e y 21,
—
l i a b l e to
543.
554.
Second —
in three w a y s
of the senses
195.
A p p r o a c h unto G o d 1 0 4 , 1 0 7 , 3 2 9 , 4 6 4 , 5 6 6 . Arsenius
154,
563, 568Asceticism Asking
4 5 1 bis,
561—
L.
g r e a t things f r o m the k i n g 32 sqq.
Athanasius ries"
308—312,
185.
His
„Mirror
of solita-
560.
Basilius Beasts
23, 243, 290,
of
the
righteous, Beauty.
field
387.
Inward —
82; —
of
the
and m e r c y 8 ; m e n t a l —•
solitaty
creates a l l b e a u t i e s Body.
To
353.
are s u b m i s s i v e to the
l e a v e the —
the —
that
behind
5;
o f the — 5 2 0 ; — caused b y selilove 5 3 9 ; —•
things
a c o m r a d e of sin 2 6 7 ;
purified
to die if it shall v a n q u i s h sin 2 6 7 ; w h e n
flesh
o f u n b e l i e f 488 ; the g a r m e n t
away
by
troubles
w o v e n from the —
540;
coat
of
8; —
( M a r ) 63, 4 3 7 .
Agathon
510,
Alexander Allegorical
(spiritual) 216,
sqq.
i n G o d 7 , 40.
Bread.
T h e heavenly
Care Cell.
68;
their n a t u r e
God's wisdom
182 s q q . ; d o not
186, 1 9 6 ; —
—
558.
316.
2l8bis.
sq.
185, 421
has
o p p o s e d , else it w i l l b e c o m e a
Bonds
A - n g e l s h e l p i n g m a r t y r s and solitaries 6 6 —
Ammon
he
n e s s of j o y 4 5 4 ; curtain of the — 405.
interpretation X X I V
Allurements
visible
seductor 2 6 0 ; — a b a n d o n e d in the d r u n k e n -
569.
the G r e a t
after
t h e b o d y is w e a k , the soul is s t r o n g 2 6 8 ;
550.
should Afrem
longing
5 ; its e v i l
deliberations
4 8 8 ; the —
its
119;
187.
reach
c a n n o t teach
us true c o n t e m p l a t i o n 1 9 7 ; their i n f l u e n c e
( d i v i n e ) surrounds m e n a l w a y s 64. Staying
stances
130,
in the — 177,
340,
u n d e r all circum342;
—
is
the
c a v e r n o f Moses' r e v e l a t i o n 1 7 8 ; treasures o f the —
216.
GENERAL
392 Children Cloud
guarded by G o d
525.
333
1 9 3 , 2 1 7 : — which covers the ta-
bernacle 480. Commandments.
Spiritual —
place of written law Commentator XVII,
113
take
the
91.
(Theodore of Mopsuestia)
sq.,
1 5 s sqq., 1 6 0 , 1 6 8 , 3 1 9 ,
352, 358, 418. Commerce.
T h e time of —
Communion
to be
177.
pushed back by the
C o n c e n t r a t i o n X X X V I s q . ; — and excellence 1 sq., 1 9 , 4 4 ; — and contemplation 4 5 ; — and recitation 9 2 ; — and prayer 1 2 9 , 1 7 1 sq., 4 4 6 ; — of the senses 1 3 1 ; — 136, 142, 146, 2 1 9 , 243, 332, 336, 447; — promoted by fasting 4 5 2 ; — 4 6 6 ; — the of the solitary 5 1 5 ; — 5 1 6 ,
547,
5 5 5 , 56o. Consolation
181.
366, 3 7 7 , 379, 395, 408, 529 sqq.;
— and fear 3 6 2 , Contemplation excellence
17;
X X X I X , compared with definition of —
17;
first
and second natural — 3 1 ; angelic —
31;
also called the naked mind 3 1 ; divine •— 31,
198;
—• and
53,
126;
—
heavenly
concentration
is psychic
contemplations
45;
sight 1 2 8 , 134:
—
•— 162;
during
prayer 1 3 5 , 1 6 4 ; prayer different from —• 1 6 6 ; — and s p i r i t u a l — 1 6 8 ; p r o f o u n d — • 182;
essential —
1 8 7 , 1 9 8 ; veracious
—
1 9 4 ; true — is essential sight 1 9 5 ; light of —
200;
spiritual — 2 1 7 ,
303,
570;
true — 2 2 2 ; — 2 2 3 ; — which is interpreted spiritual sight 2 6 0 , 5 4 4 ; immaterial •—• 3 0 3 ;
personal
—
304;
heavenly
—
3 0 7 ; — and solitude 3 3 9 ; — 4 4 4 ; true —
the mortification of the heart 444 ; —
and
prayer
475;
—
5 1 3 ; intelligible —
4 9 2 ; — in ecstasy 5 2 1 ; the kingdom of
heaven is spiritual — 5 2 8 ; — of all the worlds 5 4 4 ; practice anterior to — divine —
571;
571. T h e second —
Cross.
double nature 1 5 s q . ; -— 2 2 3 ,
81.
2 3 2 ; excellence is called the —
532;
—
is the gate of mysteries 544. C r u c i f i x i o n of the mind 2 2 3 , 2 3 2 , 2 3 3 ; —• of the body 2 3 8 ; we have always to take upon us — Customs. 234;
535.
Lascivious — 4 ; cutting off —
recollection
feared —
of —
297;
438,
448,
456,
481,
498, 537D e a d to the world 1 9 , 3 1 , 5 1 , 59, 7 5 , 76, 97,
121,
435,
147,
444,
148,
501,
2 5 1 , 3 1 0 , 332, 346,
544; die
3 1 , 3 3 3 , 3 3 5 ' , to
to be dead in life in
integrity 3 1 , 9 7 ,
— to the world by veracious prayer 4 7 5 ; mortification regarding all things 1 1 2 , 5 0 7 ; to become — in life for the sake of G o d 5 5 2 ; — to all things 3 9 7 , 5 7 2 . Death
of the body is strength of the soul
268; 332,
— 271; 333,
inner
235;
deadncss
331;
—
— of the outward limbs
4 4 4 ; fear of — 1 0 ; — desired as life 1 0 ; recollection of — 4 4 , 4 5 3 , 4 5 8 , 460, 4 6 2 , 464;
—
does
lover
219;
not exist 209;
—
voluntary
with G o d
189;
agreeable to the —
of
the
senses
2 7 0 ; — cognate to sleepiness of mind 2 8 9 ; no one 407; of
to be
called a victor before —
risking — for the sake of the love
God
436;
—
the seal on
our book
4 3 6 ; — desirable 4 8 2 ; better is death in struggle than life with falling 2 1 5 ,
538.
D e g r e e s . T h e way consists in t h r e e — 1 2 2 , the degrees of the path 3 0 3 . Dejectedness
113,
180, 1 8 1 , 2 1 3 ,
258,
259, 2 7 7 , 284, 2 9 1 , 299, 302, 340, 385, 4 5 5 , 466, 468, 4 8 5 , 506, 5 3 5 sq., 5 8 0 ; — the beginning tuated by
of darkness 1 4 s q . ; effec-
distraction 2 1 7 , 3 8 3 ; by lone-
liness 4 5 5 , 4 6 6 ; nothing is so strong as despair 5 3 2 ; how — vanishes Delight
555.
may rise suddenly during prayer
5 8 ; does not appear at will 1 6 3 ; —• preceded by the pains of the cross 2 1 6 . D e m o n s . T h e i r nature 1 8 2 s q q . , 1 9 6 . Desert
1.
Despair
see Dejectedness.
Despondency Deviation Diodorus
see Dejectedness.
see Aberration. Rhetor X V I I , 186, 2 4 2 ; —
of
Tarsus 2 8 5 .
Creation. Its
3 4 1 s q . ; the — of temp—
intelligible —
C o n f i d e n c e (trust) 99 sqq., 1 9 2 sq., 2 4 1 , 291,
413;
when the soul is — 2 1 0 ; — ill sins 2 5 2 ;
solitary 1 5 3 . See s. v. Mercy.
desire
sq., 3 3 9 ,
tations
268/9, 2 9 0 ; the soul — by affections 4 6 ;
with G o d 8, 5 3 4 .
Compassion
REGISTER
—
to be
527.
Dionysius
the A r e o p a g i t e L I I I , 169.
D i s c e r n m e n t (distinction) 4 1 sq., 8 9 , 1 3 4 — 136,
146,
189,
217,
238
sq., 2 8 1 ,
379,
4 3 2 sq., 4 4 2 sq., 4 6 5 sq., 4 7 9 , 546, 5 5 5 , 566, 573Disdain
has to be sought L I V sq., 76, 85
sq., 3 5 6 . On the question whether —• may be sought by assumming a sinful appearance 1 4 2 sq. Disparity
1 9 2 sq., 207. See E q u a l i t y .
D i s t r a c t i o n X X X V I 1 , 3, 5 3 . 60, 7 2 , 82, D a r k n e s s of mind 1 4 , 1 2 4 , 1 4 4 , 2 8 4 , 3 2 9 ,
122,
131,
135,
172,
213,
216, 271
sq.,
GENERAL 282, 3 3 2 , 466, 4 8 1 , 4 8 5 , 5 1 4 , 5 1 7 , 5 4 1 ; — a n d i n t e r c o u r s e 5 2 ; — an o p p o r t u n i t y for Satan 1 3 0 ; — e f f e c t u a t e s d e j e c t e d n e s s 2 1 7 , 3 8 3 ; — and good works 308; •—damages chastity 4 4 5 ; h o w it vanishes 5 5 5 . D o g m a t i c s . I s a a c ' s aversion to — X X V I . D r u n k e n n e s s X L I I I , L I , 2, 59, 1 7 4 , 2 0 2 , 220, 254, 3 3 4 , 358, 3 7 7 , 4 5 4 , 504, 5 1 1 , 543) 5 5 5 ; n e v e r ceasing — 7 7 ; d r u n k w i t h living wine 5 5 5 . Dunghill.
Man's —
32.
E c s t a s y 5 bis, 20, 43, 73, 106, 1 2 5 , 1 3 9 , 155, 175, 2 5 9 , 305, 360, 3 9 1 , 4 5 1 , 4 7 1 , 4 8 9 , 5 ' 3 , 5 l 6 ? 5 4 9 ; — w h e n t h e twofold senses are closed 9; ecstatic u n d e r s t a n d i n g w h e n t h e h e a r t is free f r o m recollections 5 2 ; m a n becomes as a c o r p s e w i t h o u t a soul t h r o u g h — 1 6 4 ; — a n d p r a y e r 166, 174, 2 6 1 ; — in t h e w o r l d to come 1 7 0 ; — d u r i n g four days 2 6 1 ; — in God 304, 3 7 6 ; — and silence 3 6 0 ; ecstatic t h o u g h t of God 3 7 7 ; — d u r i n g th ree days 3 8 8 ; — d u r i n g one day 1 8 9 ; —
492;
d u r i n g sleep
— 513Emotions.
See
contemplation
in
Impulses.
E n l i g h t e n e d m e n 6 ; — intellect 8. E p h r a i m Syrus 4 3 7 . E q u a l i t y and n o n - e q u a l i t y 192, 207, 213. Error
see A b e r r a t i o n .
E s s e n c e ( = G o d ) 187, 194, 198, 199, 200, 376, 378, 4 5 5 , 4 7 0 . E u a g r i u s 4, 106, 1 7 4 , 1 7 5 , 385, 4 4 3 , 4 5 6 , 462, 495, 497 sq., 5 1 3 , 573. E x c e l l e n c e and c o n c e n t r a t i o n 1 s q . ; — a n d the world 2 ; — and c o n t e m p l a t i o n 1 7 ; — the n a t u r a l h e a l t h of t h e soul 2 4 ; p r i o r to s p i r i t u a l k n o w l e d g e 3 0 ; what is
4 2 3 > — is called t h e cross 5 3 2 .
F a c e of G o d can tially 3 2 4 .
be seen b u t not essen-
F a i t h has to be combined with works 1 0 2 ; t h e value of — 3 1 5 ; t h e d e g r e e s of — 3 1 8 s q q . ; — a n d k n o w l e d g e 3 1 8 , 360 sqi-i 3 7 9 ! t h e g a t e of the mysteries 3 1 5 ; — of sight 3 2 0 ; taste of — 366 ; — m a k e s m a n like G o d 3 6 2 ; when — swallows k n o w l e d g e 3 7 4 ; definitions o f — 3 7 6 , 482. Familiarity
with G o d 265.
F a m i l i a r i t y of s p e e c h 36, 4 1 , 7 3 , 75, I! 4 , 330, 335, 353, 4 2 1 , 427, 528. See Freedom. F a s t i n g 238 sqq. Without — no knowledge of G o d ' s mysteries 4 8 ; — t h e sign of b e g i n n i n g strife 2 3 8 ; — of the ascetics
REGISTER
393
a n d m a r t y r s 2 4 1 s q . ; effectuates s t r e n g t h in t h e soul 2 6 8 ; — o n the way to light 2 8 1 ; solitude a n d — 2 8 2 ; — h e l p f u l for c o n c e n t r a t i o n 452. Fate
175 ; see A c c i d e n t s .
F e a r of G o d I s q q . , 3 1 5 s q . ; — a n d doubt 4; bodily a n d psychic — 2 0 ; — p r i o r to love 3 0 ; b r i n g s t h e soul n e a r to G o d 8 1 , cf. 3 1 5 ; h o p e a n d fear 9 1 ; — a n d trust 194, 3 6 2 ; w h e n fear is e x p e l l e d 1 9 4 ; — a n d love 3 1 7 , 4 3 0 ; n o fear of o u t w a r d t h i n g s in the true solitary 539. F e r v o u r 19, 94, 95, 1 2 2 , 1 2 7 sq., 1 2 9 , 1 3 1 , 136, 1 7 2 , 2 4 1 , 282, 3 3 2 , 3 7 5 , 392, 484, 486, 5 1 2 , 5 1 9 , 550, 5 5 5 ; — causes a b r o t h e r to beat the e a r t h with his h e a d a h u n d r e d times 1 4 0 ; — caused b y t h i n k i n g of G o d 2 6 1 . F i l e 190, 328. F o r g e t (to) t h e world 5, 399, 5 2 6 ; — all t h a t is h e r e 1 7 0 ; — all worldly t h i n g s 2 5 1 , cf. 1 7 4 ; 1 7 9 , 2 5 5 , 3 2 5 , 3 6 9 ; — one's o w n n a t u r e 2 5 4 ; — b o d i l y life 3 2 7 ; — t h e b o d y a n d t h e world 3 2 7 , 3 3 8 ; — o n e self 3 9 5 ; —- t h e w o r l d a n d life of t h e flesh 5 1 8 ; — t h e b o d y 520. F r e e d o m XXXII; XLIX; 3,5,6,13,170, 175, 191, 195, 207, 3 2 3 . F r e e d o m of s p e e c h ( f r a n k n e s s ) 73, 75, 1 1 4 , I 5 1 , 2 9 1 , 330, 335, 4 2 7 , 4 2 9 , 528. See Familiarity. F r i e n d (God, the) 219. G a r m e n t . L a s t — of t h e m i n d 3 1 . G l a d n e s s . E x u l t i n g joy 5 8 ; — w i t h o u t cause 1 7 7 , 4 7 1 ; •— in G o d takes away all o t h e r sensations 4 3 1 ; — as a m e a n s to recognize the d e g r e e of one's own soul 4 8 3 ; spiritual — 4 8 4 ; — w h i c h n o tongue can express 4 8 6 ; — s o m e t i m e s causes t h e solitary to give u p r e c i t a t i o n of Psalms 550; unspeakable — 555. G l o r y . Vain — a n d f o r n i c a t i o n 4 5 ; t h e h a r m of — 328. G o l d . I m a g e s of — a n d precious things 278. G r a c e . Its s u d d e n w o r k i n g s 1 7 7 ; w h a t — i m p a r t s to us 198. G r a v e , t h e time of g a t h e r i n g fruits 4 3 5 . G u a r d i a n . Man's — 1 7 5 sq. Handiwork.
See W o r k .
H e a l i n g of the soul 1 6 ; — of t h e i n n e r m a n 483. H e a l t h of the soul 24, 89, 4 3 3 , 4 8 4 ; — effectuated by sickness of t h e b o d y 6 9 ; — gives b i r t h to k n o w l e d g e 4 3 1 ; — injured by i n t e r c o u r s e 4 3 5 . Hearing
and sight 54, 320.
GENERAL
394
H e a r t the central organ of the inward senses 29. H e l l . Definition of — 8 8 ; — does not exist with God 1 8 9 ; intelligible — 4 5 6 , 5 2 1 ; — is ignorance and oblivion of God 523. H i d d e n things 5 1 , 1 2 7 sq., 149, 1 8 1 , 382, 319, 338, 373, 396, 4 i o , 438, 529, 5 3 o ; hidden states 5 1 9 . H o n o u r to be rejected 76, 120. H o p e a n d fear 9 1 ; — 9 6 ; all — has to be given u p by him that begins with the works of God 97. H o u s e m a t e s . God's — 33, 36. God as a —• 62. H u m b l e 76, 85 sq., 93, 105, 279, 3 5 1 . Mysteries revealed to the — 1 2 2 ; characteristics of the 5 1 5 s q q . ; — is bashful before his own soul 5 1 7 ; the prayer of the humble 5 1 7 s q . ; the creatures timid before the •— 5 7 6 ; esteemed as a God by everyone 5 2 7 ; the perfect — 579. H u m i l i t y X X X V I I I , 34, 76, 93, 105, 1 0 8 s q . , 139, 220 sq., 224, 302, 3 2 1 , 4 1 4 , 4 2 1 , 432, 507, 524. W o r k s and — make man a God 9 5 ; — a cause of grace 3 2 2 ; two kinds of — 3 4 6 ; — remunerated, not service 408 s q . ; — to be asked from God with tears 4 1 2 sq.; — the beginning of repentance 4 4 4 ; — expiates many sins 4 9 9 ; — compared to salt 4 9 9 ; how — is acquired 508; the characteristics of — 5 1 4 ; — and mercy 5 2 8 ; high rank of — 574 s q q . ; — the garment of divinity 5 7 4 ; — makes a man Christlike 5 7 4 ; true -— 5 7 8 ; the summit of — 580. H u m o u r s . T h e f o u r — 580. I g n o r a n c e . W h e t h e r — will be annihilated 8 7 ; — during prayer 1 7 5 ; — and oblivion of God 522. I l l n e s s 3 4 7 ; — of thoughts 1 6 ; —• of the soul 24, 46, 344, 4 0 1 ; sick in mind 400. Illuminated
(the)
158,
162, 226,
278,
324, 34°I l l u m i n a t i o n X X X V I I I , 6, 1 2 5 , 164, 196, 326, 330, 337, 389, 446, 448, 455, 485, 4 9 i , 555, 562, 567. I m a g e of God is the soul X L V I I I , 2 1 , 126, 169. I m p u l s e s X X X I . Inward — 4 ; intellectual — 3 1 ; — in God 4 6 ; divine — 59, 2 5 9 ; illuminated — 48, 226, 2 8 1 ; spiritual — 87, 166, 3 7 6 ; — of the soul 166, 2 6 0 ; distinctive — 2 3 0 ; ecstatic — 2 5 4 ; hot — of the, body 2 8 5 ; dark and cold — 293, 3 4 1 ; contemplative 3 0 3 ; — of k n o w l e d g e 3 7 7 ; .— of love a n d beautiful things 3 9 2 ; clear —• 399, 4 3 8 ; — interwoven with
REGISTER prayer 4 4 0 ; fervent — of the soul 4 4 7 ; troubled — 4 4 8 ; — unto the entrance in the spiritual world 4 5 4 ; — of the will 4 7 5 ; right h a n d — 480; uncorporeal 486; hot and quick — 5 1 6 ; scarce — which are not swift 5 1 7 ; perverted — 5 2 7 ; hidden emotions 5 3 8 ; vibrating, hot — of the S e r a p h s ; simple — 57 1 • I n i t i a t e d (the) 1 6 2 , 1 8 7 , 2 5 0 ; — eyes of faith 3 6 1 ; — soul 4 7 0 ; — knowledge 4 8 3 ; Euagrius is called one of the •— 573. I n s p i r a t i o n 160, 390 s q q . I n t e l l i g e n t . T h e — 479. I n t e l l i g i b l e rays between the words ot the scriptures 6 ; — forces of the soul 9 1 , of the mind 1 6 1 ; — apperceptions 1 7 4 ; — death 2 0 9 ; — force 3 7 0 ; — resurrection 3 7 4 ; — light 3 7 6 ; — hell 4 5 6 ; distinction between — things 472, 4 9 4 ; — sight 4 7 2 ; — air 4 7 2 ; — sun 4 7 3 ; —• contemplation 5 2 1 ; — places 522. I n t e n t i o n . T h e heart's — 292. I n t e r c o u r s e (or Association) X X X I V sq., 52, 130, 131 bis, 1 3 3 , 2 4 7 ; — injures the soul 89, 3 1 4 ; — compared to a blist of cold 1 3 2 ; — the cause of darkness 3 2 9 ; — with God and men 3 3 3 ; — injures health 4 3 5 ; lonely 566, 572. I n t o x i c a t i o n . See Drunkenness. J o h n o f T h e b a ' i s 1 5 2 ; the blessed J o h n 334J o y . See Gladness. J u s t i c e as compared with compassion 344, 348. K i n g d o m . T h e pure — 2 2 1 . I C n e e l i n g s 57 sq., 98, 162, 3 4 1 , 488. K n o w i n g oneself is k n o w i n g all things 224. K n o w l e d g e X L I sq. Spiritual — posterior to excellence 3 0 ; second natural — 3 1 ; — without excellence impossible 4 2 ; — of life 4 2 ; first summit of — is that of the mysteries of Created things 4 8 ; essential 60, 1 8 7 ; on the speech of true — 1 7 5 s q q . ; the way of true — 1 8 0 ; love the child of true — 2 0 1 ; Sunday a symbol of true — 2 0 2 ; spiritual — 2 1 7 , 2 2 1 , 3 1 8 sqq.. 3 3 7 , 522, 5 2 6 ; — , love and sight 2 2 2 ; — and humility 2 2 4 ; — with discernment 2 8 1 ; — of God 3 0 7 ; degrees of — 3 1 8 sqq., 360 sqq.; — anterior to faith and — posterior to it 3 1 8 ; psychic — 366, 430, 437, 474, 5 2 8 ; simple — 3 6 9 ; when — is swallowed by faith 3 7 4 ; impulses of — 377 sqq-'•> natural, spiritual and supernatural — 377 s q . ; clear flame of holy — 395 5 t r u e — 4 3 ° , 4 7 ° , 494 5 — gives birth to love 4 3 1 ; — b o r n from
GENERAL health of the soul 4 3 1 ; a definition of — 4 3 1 ; spiritual — and love 4 7 5 ; — incomparable 4 4 7 ; partial accomplishment in spiritual — reached by a few only 4 7 3 ; initiated — 2 8 3 ; spiritual — not reached by psychic — 5 2 6 ; snares of psychic — 528. L i g h t . I n w a r d —• springs from purity of thoughts 175 essential — 4 9 ; mind clad with — 5 2 ; the flower of the — of truth 5 2 ; — of knowledge 187; —• of contemplation 200, 5 5 0 ; — of faith 3 6 0 ; intelligible — 3 7 6 ; — of the soul 379, 434, 5 5 7 ; — o f t h e m i n d 447, 482, 5 6 0 ; •— of life 4 5 6 ; — and sight 4 7 2 ; divine — 4 7 4 ; hidden — 530. L i k e n e s s . Divine — 169, 507, 510. L o v e X L I I sq., more intimate than service 55 s q . ; — even in H e l l 2 0 1 ; — a child of true knowledge 201, 4 3 1 ; drunk with — 2 0 2 ; the ways of — 205 s q . ; spiritual — 2 1 7 ; divine — 2 1 8 ; — is hot by nature 2 1 9 ; — and madness 2 1 9 ; — , knowledge and sight 2 2 2 ; — of God and tears 2 4 5 ; — of God the accomplishment of all spiritual fruits 261 ; the bread of — 316 s q . ; m e a n i n g of — 3 1 7 ; — and fear 3 1 7 ; the flame of the love of God 3 3 7 ; — caused by God is a fountain from the depth 3 8 2 ; to be consumed by — 4 3 0 ; divine — the flower of spiritual knowledge 4 7 5 ; — the fruit of prayer 4 7 5 ; — of God is selfdenial 4 7 6 ; — of m a n k i n d 507, 508, 510; •— of God and of mankind 570. Lucidity
131, 134.
M a c a r i u s 495, 500. M a d n e s s 131, 219 sq., 254. M a g g e n a n u t h a 390 sqq. M a n ' s nature 197. M a r c u s the solitary 532. M a r t y r s 2 2 0 ; spiritual — 3 1 ; unseen tyrdom 209, 2 4 2 ; fasting of the — s q . ; — are those who suffer for neighbour 3 4 8 ; — and renunciation who the real — is 4 5 6 ; the living —
mar241 their 436; 457.
M a t t e r X X V I I I , a screen 2 ; solution from — 7, 4 0 . M e a n s L V ; belong to knowledge, not to faith 360 s q q . M e d i t a t i o n 72, 77, 98, 376, 486, 4 9 3 ; its value and effect 7 3 ; — and ecstasy 7 3 ; nocturnal — 138; — and the second stage of knowledge 3 7 2 ; constant — and the light of the soul 3 7 9 ; — and the origin of tears 3 8 5 ; spiritual — 4 6 1 ; contemplative — 492.
REGISTER
395
M e r c y 8 sq., 42 sq., 54, 455 sq., 492, 506, 507. See also s. v. Compassion. M e s a l l e y â n ë 495. Mind
KlJOCn).
to heart 2 9 ; naked —
Its relation
31 bis, 3 0 3 ; —
naturally tends towards good 197. M i r r o r X X X V I I . Our own state a — of godly things 4 5 5 ; the pure soul a — 5 2 0 ; to see God in a — ¡ 6 4 . M o r t i f i c a t i o n see s. v. Dead. M o t i o n s . See s. v. Impulses. M o u n t a i n s beyond the Ocean 188. M o u r n i n g . Its value 523, M y s t e r i e s of visible things 4 8 ; hidden — 6 8 ; — of God's greatness 7 2 ; God's — 83. N a k e d . T h e monk goes — through the world 3 2 6 ; — mind 31, 303. N a t u r e is the first book given to man 61. Natural,
praeternatural and
375Negligence N i t r i a 185.
supernatural
in small things 289.
O c e a n surrounds the borders of heaven and earth 188. Path.
T h e mystic
—
has
three
degrees
X X I V , 121. P e r f e c t (the), 250, 271, 495, 569, 5 7 8 ; perfect man 5 3 1 ; the — need not mingle with works of mercy 573. P e r f e c t i o n X X X V I I I , 108, 122, 2 5 1 , 2 8 0 , 478, 491, 507 sq., 560. P h i l o X L V I sqq. P h i l o s o p h e r s 21, 401, 4 0 3 sqq. P I o t i n u s XL1X sqq. P r a c t i c e . Practical things of a composite nature 7 ; — and theory 1 5 ; practical things confuse the soul 81 ; — anterior to contemplation 571. P r a i s e is to be avoided 78. P r a y e r X X X I X sq. ; — which it is not allowed to describe 129. P u r i f y i n g — 5 2 ; — act off by delight 5 3 ; the significance of — 105 s q . ; —• that gives place to thanksgivings 106; — drives away the cloud of the affections 124; mysteries of — 151; what h a p p e n s during — unto those who live in solitude 162 sq. ; distinctions in — 163 sq. ; the limit which — is not allowed to surpass 163 s q . ; delight during — different from sight during — 164; contemplation during — 1 6 4 ; — vanishes by contemplation 164; pure — the limit of — 1 TS'i — a n < l ecstasy 166, 174, 2 6 1 ; — different from contemplation .166; a few are deemed
396
GENERAL REGISTER
w o r t h y of pure — 1 6 7 ; p u r e — X L , 167, 168, 1 7 5 , 379, 4 5 3 , 5 1 9 ; spiritual — X L I ; c a n n o t be p r a y e d 168, 1 7 0 ; contemplation and spiritual prayer 168 ; — a mediator between the psychic a n d the spiritual state 1 6 9 ; when — ceases 170, 1 7 5 ; •—• is the time for receiving gifts 1 7 3 ; spiritual — 1 7 5 , 260, 5 1 9 ; no — w i t h o u t tears 2 5 3 ; c o n s t a n t — 259, 304, 544, 5 5 7 ; — the starting p o i n t for inner Sight 260; contemplative — 3 2 6 ; — t h e key to insight 3 2 9 ; — o p e n u n d e r all circumstances 3 4 2 ; — m o r e excellent than alms 3 8 5 ; — requires t r a i n i n g 4 3 9 ; — with a view to the love of G o d 4 3 9 ; true •— 4 4 0 ; recitation a source of p u r e — 4 4 7 ; — during the night is h i g h e r t h a n a n y work on the day 4 4 7 ; h i d d e n — 469, 4 7 0 ; love the fruit of — 4 7 5 ; a definition of — 4 7 5 , 5 0 8 ; true — is dying to the world 4 7 5 ; lonely — 4 7 5 ; w h e n — is cut off 4 9 0 ; no — in the world to come 5 0 3 ; revelations d u r i n g — 5 5 6 ; n i g h t — higher t h a n — on t h e day 5 5 8 ; — d u r i n g vigils feared by all things 559.
Satan
above
P r o s t r a t i o n s 129. P r o t o t y p e 455. P u r e . T h e — 8, 5 2 2 ; the •— in heart 50, 5 6 4 ; — m i n d 92, 2 5 9 ; — heart 1 1 8 ; the new h e a v e n s t a m p e d in the — heart 5 2 2 ; — spirit 547. P u r i f y (to) — the mind (heart) 16, 75, 555 ; — oneself from sin 64; — the soul 4 7 5 ; —• the sight of the soul 564. P u r i f i c a t i o n X X V I I I ; —• on account of works 9 5 ; threefold — 161; second — of the m i n d 1 6 2 ; •—• of the soul 184, 2 4 3 ; — of the body by service 3 0 4 ; — of t h e inner b e i n g 447. P u r i t y X X X V I I s q . ; — of deliberations the source of inward light 1 7 ; natural — of the soul 2 5 ; — of the m i n d 27, 306, 5 1 3 , 5 2 7 ; •—• of the heart 29, 165, 250, 3 4 8 ; — preserved by works a n d recitation 9 1 ; how it is effectuated 53, 1 2 8 ; r a n k of — 1 6 2 ; •—• during p r a y e r 1 6 9 ;
p r e p a r e s ecstasy 43 ; — has to take place in complete rest 48 ; effectuates the illumination of the mind 5 3 ; effectuates subtlety of m i n d 6 8 ; — is a fortification of the m i n d 1 3 5 ; — used by Grace 1 6 3 ; h o w to gain delight from -— 382 ; — when the mind is distracted 446 ; •— a source of p u r e prayer 446 ; — of Psalms the root of discipline 447. R e c o l l e c t i o n 8 bis, 20 sq., 52 sq., 78, 92, 1 8 2 ; — of the b o d y 2 7 ; cannot b e s h a k e n off 2 8 ; — of the other world 53, 3 0 6 ; — of evil t h i n g s 5 9 ; profitable — 9 1 ; — of the affections 1 2 2 ; — of the dealings of n o n - f r e e d o m 244 ; — of this world in the world to come 2 5 7 ; e x t e r n a l 2 5 8 ; — of G o d 2 5 8 , 2 6 0 sq., 4 9 3 , 5 1 2 , 5 4 7 ; — of things of this world 260; •—• of transitory t h i n g s 2 8 2 ; obliterated — 2 8 3 ; — of customs 297", — of visible t h i n g s vanishes by the — of God 3 7 5 ; •— of worldly things effaced in the third degree of knowledge 3 7 3 ; — to be admitted with discernment 3 8 1 , 3 9 6 ; getting void of the trouble of — 468 ; affections which are ill by — 4 8 4 ; — without affections 4 8 4 ; — of sensible things 487 ; the recollections w h i c h are lost sight of 5 1 4 ; — of the world 545. —
R e l a x a t i o n of t h e limbs 58. R e m u n e r a t i o n in accordance with f u n d a m e n t a l direction of man 92.
the
R e n u n c i a t i o n higher t h a n giving alms 56. R e p e n t a n c e X X V I I sqq., II, 115, n 8 , 132, 139, 179, 315, 3 1 7 , 320, 337, 4 4 3 sq^, 453, 4 4 8 , 461 sq., 4 9 4 , 5 0 2 , 5 0 7 . R e s u r r e c t i o n of the soul 246, cf. 2 8 2 ; the w o n d e r of — 3 5 8 s q . ; intelligible — 3,74R e v e l a t i o n X X X I X , 1 5 4 sqq., 161 s q q . , 247, 338, 5 4 5 ; — is silence of intellect 1 5 5 ; six kinds of — 1 5 6 ; — and t r u t h 1 6 0 ; — to the angels 199 s q . ; — a n d vision 249 ; intelligible — h i g h e r than purity 472 ; revelations usually take place in the n i g h t a n d in p r a y e r 556. R u f i n u s (ecclesiastical writer) 264.
— of emotion 2 0 9 ; the limits of — 2 5 0 ; — of the soul 2 5 3 , 306, 5 1 9 ; true •— 260; bodily a n d psychic — 3 0 6 ; stage of — 3 8 1 ; — and h i d d e n t h i n g s 4 3 8 : w h a t — is 4 7 2 ; the h a r b o u r of — 4 8 9 ; partial — 4 9 4 j repentance, •— a n d perfection 5 0 7 ; — can only be r e a c h e d by solitude 520; definition of — 5 2 0 R a p t u r e 50, 1 5 6 ; cf. 1 7 1 . R e c i t a t i o n 98, 218, 4 8 8 ; — in solitude
S a b b a t h and Sunday 202 s q q . ; •— a n d grave 203 s q . S a t a n . W h a t — means 1 8 9 ; the different ways in which — combates the solitary 269. S c r i p t u r e s . Intelligible ray b e t w e e n t h e words of the — 6. S c r u t i n i z i n g blamed 47. S e n s e s X X I X ; — of the flesh a n d of the soul g ; — h a v e to be silent 16, 67 ; — of the soul 29; inward — 2 9 ; — the last g a r m e n t of
GENERAL the mind
3 1 ; •— must he subdued
inner — tual
281;
3 3 8 , 3 7 4 ; silent — 4 3 0 ; spiri-
—
of the mind 4 7 2 , 4 7 5 ;
spiritual
REGISTER
397
of — 246 s q . ; — and fasting 2 8 2 ;
pre-
ferred to works 3 0 8 sqq., 4 6 4 ; practised by the Fathers of Scete 3 0 9 ; to dwell in — is fulfilling the two chief commandments
— of the soul 5 1 4 . of soul 1 6 7 , 2 5 1 , 3 5 0 , 360, 3 8 4 ,
3 1 3 ; — and contemplation 3 3 9 ; —• and
4 x 4 , 4 9 2 ; — of spirit 5 2 6 s q . ; of mind
repentance 4 6 2 ; praise of — 4 6 3 s q . ; the
113,
mystery
Serenity
438;
serene heart 67, 4 5 5 ; the se-
of —
465;
the aim
harbour of mysteries
rene 259.
of —
the
4 6 7 ; the profits of
S e r v i c e . Psychic — 3 0 4 ; invisible — 3 0 7 .
— 4 6 8 ; how the intelligent have to dwell
Sickness.
in —
See Ilness.
S i g h t X X X I X sq., L I , 1 2 8 , 3 3 8 ; essential —
479;
and the
simple
first
—
rejected 4 8 0 ;
—
gift of the mystic 4 9 0 ; no
4 9 , 1 8 4 , 1 9 5 ; caused by works and watch-
one who keeps perfect •— in our genera-
fulness
tion 4 9 1 ;
128;
spiritual
—
9,
187,
304;
544;
—
during
prayer
164;
—
and —
222;
and purity only to be
reached by — 5 2 ° ; — compared to the
makes
grave 5 4 0 ; — recommended 5 6 4 ; — and
one motionless 1 6 6 ; kinds of — 1 8 2 s q q . ; love, knowledge
apathy
195,
divine — 1 6 1 ; psychic — 1 2 8 , 1 6 2 ,
inner
—
mercy 566 sqq. S i r e n ' s song 3 2 7 .
2 6 0 ; contemplation is interpreted spiritual
S o n g s . Spiritual —
2 6 0 ; — of G o d 3 0 6 , 3 2 4 ; — and hearing
S o u l X X X . L a d d e r from the — to the king-
54, 3 2 0 ;
true — would make the world
dom 1 2 ;
216.
pupil of the —
1 7 ; its natural
stand still 3 3 6 ; s i m p l e — 377 ; intelligible
inclinations
— 4 7 2 ; — of what is above nature 497.
its treasures
21;
S i g n s . That we should not desire — 2 8 1 sqq.
21,
God's
Silence
guarding
what is natural and not natural to it 2 3 ;
ecstasy
its natural health 2 4 ; nature of souls 1 8 2
and solitude
rises
— and
154, 4 5 1 ;
from three causes 2 9 2 ;
—
360;
•—• and
an affected heart
4 4 6 ; — and truth 4 4 6 ; — causes union G o d 4 4 6 ; — is to be loved above
with all
things 4 5 0 , 4 5 1 ; — a symbol of the
future world 4 7 0 ; God
mysterious
silence
471. 110;
does not exist with G o d 1 8 9 ; — will
not always be and has not always been 1 8 9 ; power
and evil influence of — 208 sqq.
Sinners
sqq.; are
sq.;
246;
are to be loved 1 4 , 79, 3 4 8 , 3 5 0 ,
408, 4 5 6 sq. Sleeping
image
185;
serene —
21, 126,
another
waking
4 5 4 ; — which
is
169;
when
resurrection
they
of the
—
3 6 ° ; — becomes strong
by mortification 2 6 8 ; hidden mysteries of the —
376. of the divine glory 8.
S t o r k . M o n k compared with the — Sun
17,
50,
54, 5 2 1 ;
327.
intelligible —
86;
goes its nocturnal way behind the mountains 188;
grace, the
second —
intelligible
— 4 7 3 ; the
473-
S u n d a y and Sabbath 2 0 2 s q q . ; —
and
21;
naturally not affectable
souls see one
purified
Splendour
S i n . Intentional and unintentional — —
of
25
unto G o d 2 0 ; its nature
of true k n o w l e d g e
symbol
202.
not — 4 8 6 ; the mystic speaks with G o d in his sleep 2 6 2 ; p r a y e r during — 259. Small
things.
The
tremendous
influence
of — 287 sq.
T e a r s . See also s. v. W e e p i n g ; 98, 1 3 1 , 1 3 9 , 221,
490, 492 sq., 4 9 9 ; — attract grace
48;
—
and
fasting 4 8 ;
—
when grace
S o c r a t e s , the historian 2 6 3 .
opens a man's eyes 4 9 ; perpetual •— 5 8 ;
Solitary
when
has a higher rank than he that
the
fountain
of
—
is given
73;
gives alms 5 6 ; his behaviour the pride of
what comes after — 9 4 ; •— as a criterium
the church 1 1 9 ; his work
of the solitary's state 1 2 5 s q . ;
Solitary
life
117
sqq.;
150. its beauty
119;
—
126,
128,
perpetual
3 9 7 , 4 4 3 , 4 8 9 ; when per-
compared to an unfathomable sea 1 2 5 ; on
petual
the solitary career 1 2 7
1 2 8 ; — quicken the cold emotions
sqq.
S o l i t u d e X X X I V sq., a fence to the senses 2 1 ; — is more than all signs and powers 45 - —
is higher
than missionary
work
4 5 ; — and ecstasy 1 3 9 ; the right — 1 4 9 ; definition of —
1 5 4 ; — and purity
of —
combined
with — 2 4 3 ; — is the begin-
ning —
163;
162;
mysteries
works have to be
of the purification of the soul 2 4 3 ; expels
the affections 2 4 4 ; the effects
—
stop
sweet — 1 6 5 ,
127;
when
—
begin 131;
2 2 9 , 4 8 4 , 5 5 5 ; — a sign
of grace —
1 7 7 ; — a sign of beginning
fruits 2 4 4 ;
—
a sign
of
the
transition
from the bodily to the spiritual state 2 4 5 ; — and the love of G o d 2 4 5 ; effects of — 245;
delight
of
—• 2 5 2 ;
—
caused
by
love 2 6 1 ; immesurable — 1 8 1 ;
perpetual
—
384;
during
prayer
a
charisma
—
originate in pure meditation 3 8 5 ; •— did
GENERAL
398 not leave
Paul for three years 3 9 7 ; gift
REGISTER 448;
—
as a means
to recognize one's
of — during service 4 4 6 ; — the accom-
own degree of discipline 4 8 3 ; — happen
plishment
to every man 4 9 4 ; — compared to changes
of prayer
sight 4 5 1 ;
—
446;
during
— born from
prayer
460,
547;
spontaneous — a sign of approaching victory
480;
—
when
the mind gazes
at
spiritual things 4 9 2 ; — during sleep 4 9 2 ;
of the weather 4 9 $ . Vigils
52,
134
sqq., 4 5 0 , 4 6 9 , 4 8 8 ,
546
s q q . , 563 sq. V i s i o n . See Sight.
— during prayer cause forgiveness of sins Weakness.
5 4 3 5 — during vigils 548. Temptations
34
sqq.;
—
of the
soul
and — of the body 3 5 s q . ; are necessary 36,
104,
109;
we should not seek them
3 7 ; are not to be shunned in critical cases 37;
divine help in — 6 5 ; — in accord-
ance with gifts 2 9 8 ; kinds of — 2 9 9 ; — and divine heaven —
help
3 0 3 ; by — the gate of
is opened 4 1 8 ; for which causes
are admitted 4 2 7 ; — heal the inner
his
own
Man —
from —
has to be conscious of
104,
107
sq.;
sins arising
110.
Weeping.
See also s. v. T e a r s ; psychic
—
88;
—' is [the meditation of the solitary
251
sq.;
—
and purity
252; —
expels
the affections 2 5 3 ; — a n d consolation 2 5 3 i praying for humility with — 4 1 2 sq. Wine.
Spiritual —• 3 1 7 .
W o m e n . T h e representation of beautiful —
man 4 8 3 ; — also admitted to those who
2 7 7 , 2 8 4 ; refraining from the sight of —
h a v e reached partial purity 4 9 4 ; —
is a mighty weapon
ad-
mitted by grace 5 3 ; — should not cause despair 3 6 5 . Theodore, Theodicy
one of the confessors 2 6 4 .
T h e o r y . Practice and — 54, 6 1 ,
89, 9 3 ,
1 3 5 , 2 5 1 , 276,
Treasury
1 4 1 , 158, 165;
—
love
and
humility
—
a
God
have
to
be
combined
with
solitude
solitude preferable to —
385.
H o w to be far from t h e — 1 8 ; —
body of the — 78 ; how the — may become
52;
the solitary's
to renunciate
servant
100;
—
the whole compared
2 2 9 ; how to give up the — 1 3 0 ; what —
to be sought
122;
divine
—
means 3 3 2 . World
192.
221.
U n i f i c a t i o n X X V I , X L I V , 8, 1 6 9 , 1 9 4 , 4 6 2 .
to
be
perceived here already
states
XLV,
112,124,129,139,
1 7 9 sq., 1 9 2 , 2 0 6 , 2 1 3 sq., 2 1 6 , 2 1 9 , 2 4 6 , 416, 453,
492,
500, 5 0 5 ;
—
serve to make a man humble 1 0 9 ; — of cold
12;
in the — not to be expec-
ted 5 5 ;
two states only in the — 87 sq.
spiritual
degrees of those in — 86 s q . ;
the things of the —
and heat
man
to a whore 2 2 7 ; — compared to a prison
Unconsciousness
314,
make
2 4 3 ; — w i t h o u t humility cause many evils
remuneration
298,
sq.;
316.
a n d e v i l the eradicator of
cannot be acquired by nature
Varying
—
152
from the — 4 0 ; to withdraw from the sight
371. has
profitable to give up
12,
T r u s t . See Confidence. Truth
Works
of the —
o f l i f e is the divine love
T r e e of g o o d
it is
and affections 1 8 ; man has to be weaned
171.
within man
—• of the soul 520. Tree
—• unfit for the solitary
World.
208, 220.
Transition
57;
130;
499;
4 3 8 , 486, 5 3 6 . Trance
ment
9 5 ; — and trust 1 0 2 ; — and faith 1 0 2 ;
15.
T h i n g s (outward, worldly) 2, 3 , 8, 1 0 , 1 4 , 48,
293.
(manual) 4 4 9 ; — called an impedi-
precepts for •—• 3 8 5 .
189 sqq.
T h e o d o r e of Mopsuestia. See Commentator.
21,
Work
1 6 9 ; in the —
no
recollection of this world 257Written or him
documents that
and
laws
necessary
has not received the Com-
forter 9 1 .
1 3 7 ; — of light and darkness
3 3 9 ; — purified by prayer 4 4 1 ; good —
Z e a l condemned 3 4 3 s q . ; laudable — 395 sq.
QUOTATIONS FROM THE BIBLE page
GeDesis 3, ig
203 9 » 48,22 Exodus 20, 19 . . . . . . . 574 sq. 175 » 24,9—11 . . . . 509 „ 32,32 Lev. 2 6 , 3 6 . . . . . \ . 280 Numb. 13, 33 96 Deut. 6, 5 312 Judges 3, I sq
page
Psalms 84, I I i)
91,5 91, I I sq 91, 13 91, 15 119, 123
» V 7) n V
127, I 138,7 145,19 147,3
11
37, 35 v 40,4 „ 52,15 ,, 5 3 , 6 » 53,io » 55, 2 sq » 55,6-8 ,, 58, 2 sq.. „ 61,1 . . . . . . » 65,2 Jer. 20, 9
117 . . . . .
„
157
Job X,
39° 512
» 14 , 2 0 Proverbs 6, 27
4°
.
» 33,li » 33, 18 sq » 36, 26 Micah 7, 8 Psalms 1,5
„ » „ » ,, » »
6,6 5, 9 34, 7 34, 10 34,15 34,16 34,19 35, 1 0 36, 9 37, 35 42, 2 49, 12,20 . . . . 5i,i7 55, 22 55, 23 2
9
14 17S 411 96
10, 4 16, 19 n 22, 13 » 25,28 28, 1 28, 13 « Ecclesiastes 10,16. . . . 11, 1 . . . . Ecclesiasticus 1, 1 . . . . Matthew 5, 4 »
458 512
n 36, 2 sq Ezekiel 9, 6
,, ,, » ,, „ „ »
n ?)
73 74
n
55 205 253 456 33 13 100
5,7 6, 7
n »
n n
114 558 579
„
392
„
398 93 394 392 49° 473 390 131
51 103 74 223
„
H
« »
„
»
6,25 , 31 sq
6
6,33 7, 7 sq 7,12 8,11 8,20 10, 28 10,38, 39
71 n
» M
»
i°5
7t
67
,ï
n , 29 12,31 13,43 14, 13 15, H
97, 231 231 387 394 362 103 104 41 364 390 270 458 278 461
M
V
,, 12, 13 1 Kings 8, 11 Jes. 6, 1
. . . .
33 385 502 574 88 58I 364 35 • • • • • • • 35, 233 352 516 458 88 364 90
»
• • •
159 232, 532
400
QUOTATIONS
FROM
THE
BIBLE
page Matthew 1 8 , 3 19, 27 „ 20,22 „ 21,22 „ 22,21
. . . . .
. . . . .
» 25, 32 . . » 25,41 . . „ 26, 26, 28 „ 26, 4 1 . . Mark 2 , 1 7 „ 9, 23 „ 16, 17 L u k e 1, 35
„
. . .
13,24
„ „
14,33 • • • • 1 7 , 2 0 sq.. . .
„
17, 2 1
. . .
.
„ 21,36 John 1 , 1
. . .
.
„ w „ „
3, 1 6 14,30 16,13
. . . . . .
„ 16,33 . . . „ 2 1 , 16 . . Acts 10, 1 0 . . Romans 3, 23 sq. 8,15. . 8,21. . 8,38. . „ „
3 6 1 , 527 148 3& 3M 152 88 88 510
. . . . • • • 35, 5 ° 2 , 556 458 365 . 365 390 502 . 35
„
l8, 1
. . .
. . . . .
439, 5 i i 37« 13, 37« 502 5 ° 2 , 556 159 5°9
. .
5«i 377 426
. . 458 . 155 . 3i5 . • 299, 364, 375, 539 . 256 . 487 9, 3 • • • • 464, 509 9, 1 6 . . . . 464 1 1 , 3 2 sq. . 159
» n,33 1 Cor. 2, 9
. . . . . .
• •
•
193, 255 3i6
page 1 Cor. 3, 18 „
525 371 50
8,1
» n » 2 Cor.
12,2—4 '3,12 15, IO 4, 6
» „
5,21 12,2—4
.
. . .
50 428
» 12,7 » 1 2 , 7 sq Galatians 5, 1 7
.
5, 22 . . ; . . 6,7 Ephesians 1, 1 1 1,17—19. . . . „ 4, 22, 24 . . .
. .
»
. .
5, 16 . . . . . „ IO, 18 sq. . . Colossians 1 , 9 „
1,24
»
3, 1
1 3 , 159 371 246 40
. . .
428, 504 26 344 459 159 158, 3 9 i 521 325 392 158
. .
. . .
509 246 16, 148
.
325 417 250
.
442
4 , 4 sq. . . . 4, 5 „ 4, 1 3 . . . . 1 Thess. 5 , 1 7 2 Thess. 2, 1 3 1 Tim. 1 , 1 5 Hebrews 5, 14 „ I2,2 I Peter 3 , 1 4 1 John 4, 16
364 398
» 4, 5 Philippians 1, 29 . . . „ 2, 3 „ 2, 13 . . . V
371 556 391 258 89 510 417 316